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Manuel Rodeiro
Mississippi State University
  1.  22
    Justice and Ecocide.Manuel Rodeiro - 2021 - Environmental Ethics 43 (3):261-279.
    According to an environmental application of Rawlsian principles of justice, the well-ordered society cannot tolerate the perpetration of certain environmental harms. This paper gives an account of those harms committed in the form of ecocide. The concept of ecocide is developed, as well as the ideal of eco-relational pluralism, as conceptual tools for defending citizens’ environmental interests. This paper aims to identify persuasive and reasonably acceptable justice claims for compelling states to curtail environmentally destructive activities through recourse to principles firmly (...)
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  2.  14
    Common But Differentiated: A Theory of Responsibility for Environmental Harm.Manuel Rodeiro - 2022 - Ethics and the Environment 27 (1):79-100.
    Environmental theorists and practitioners generally accept that responsibility for environmental harm is best understood as common but differentiated, yet little work has been done to philosophically articulate this idea. This paper develops this theory by bringing Iris Marion Young's two-tiered model of responsibility to bear on the topic of addressing and redressing environmental damage. I demonstrate how her approach can satisfy the commonality criterion (i.e. that everyone has a role to play in confronting environmental harm), while still satisfying the differentiation (...)
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  3.  14
    Eco-relational Pluralism: Political Liberalism’s Challenge to the Economic Growth Imperative.Manuel Rodeiro - forthcoming - Ethics, Policy and Environment.
    Rawls theorizes principles of justice as defining a ‘pact of reconciliation’ between diverse conceptions of the good. What does fulfillment of this pact entail when reasonable pluralism is recognized as having an environmental dimension? Fair acknowledgment of the plurality of citizens’ relationships with the natural world challenges the neutrality of aims conventionally used to justify ecocide, including the promotion of economic growth and development. This paper explores how ecocide constitutes a violation of equal basic liberties and state neutrality as per (...)
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  4.  40
    Mining Thacker Pass: Environmental Justice and the Demands of Green Energy.Manuel Rodeiro - 2023 - Environmental Justice 16 (2):91-95.
    This paper considers the environmental justice issues presented by the proposed open-pit lithium mine in Thacker Pass, Nevada (Peehee mm’huh). Unlike the environmental destruction wrought from fossil fuel extraction, lithium is used to create lithium-ion batteries for storing and using electricity from “green energy” sources. Can the potential reduction in carbon emissions resulting from the lithium mined morally and politically justify the destruction of the Pass’s sagebrush sea – a critical wildlife habitat and sacred land to the People of Red (...)
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  5.  6
    A Green Turn in Transitional Justice: Ecocide as Social Death.Manuel Rodeiro - 2023 - Environmental Justice.
    Movements for environmental justice ought to engage the powerful mechanisms of change deployed in a Transitional Justice context. There is reason for restraint, however, in calling upon radically disruptive procedures to immediately amend the basic structure of society. I propose a modest expansion of the purview of Transitional Justice to recognize a class of environmental harms severe enough to trigger transitional measures. This class of harms is ecocide as social death, which I define as deliberate, state-sponsored environmental destruction resulting in (...)
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  6.  5
    Responding to ecocide through transitional justice.Manuel Rodeiro - 2024 - Dialogo 114 (1):47-79.
    This paper analyzes how Transitional Justice mechanisms might be deployed to redress injustices resulting from the perpetration of ecocide. It develops the notion of ecocide as social deathas a class of environmental harms severe enough to trigger a Transitional Justice response. If a state authorizes ecological destruction in a way that demonstrates wanton disregard for the cultures intimately connected to those ecosystems, then it has violated core liberal principles of respect for pluralism. Transitional Justice can be effectively utilized in overcoming (...)
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  7.  17
    John Töns. John Rawls and Environmental Justice: Implementing a Sustainable and Socially Just Future.Manuel Rodeiro - 2023 - Environmental Ethics 45 (1):97-99.
  8.  4
    should we pursue green economic growth?Manuel Rodeiro - 2024 - Highlights of Sustainability 3 (1):33-45.
    Environmentalists have long claimed it is unjust for the state to prioritize economic interests over environmental ones by sacrificing ecosystem integrity and functioning to unsustainably expand the economy. Recently, mainstream environmentalists have moved to a more conciliatory approach highlighting the common ground between environmental and economic goals. They today claim processes of economic growth and development can be made just if they become green. This paper explores the question: should states pursue “green growth”? Although some critics claim green growth is (...)
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  9.  20
    Rorty’s Public-Private Distinction as a Pragmatic Tool.Manuel Rodeiro - 2018 - Contemporary Pragmatism 15 (4):476-501.
    This paper focuses on interpreting Rorty’s defense of the public-private distinction. Traditionally, scholarship has been divided regarding how to interpret the distinction oscillating between ‘strict-divide’ and ‘loose-divide’ interpretations. The paper concludes that Rorty intended the loose interpretation and strives to explain how such an interpretation functions within his overall philosophical project.
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  10.  21
    Review: Alexander X. Douglas. Spinoza and Dutch Cartesianism. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015. 192 pages; $47.50/hardcover. [REVIEW]Manuel Rodeiro - 2016 - Philosophical Forum 47 (1):67-71.
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