Gossaries Gonzalez
INSTITUTIONS FOR FUTURE GENERATIONS C
Gossaries Gonzalez
INSTITUTIONS FOR FUTURE GENERATIONS C
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This volume examines how social institutions could be redesigned in order to better take into account intergenerational justice.
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This volume examines how social institutions could be redesigned in order to better take into account intergenerational justice.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 450
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Dezember 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 846g
- ISBN-13: 9780198746959
- ISBN-10: 0198746954
- Artikelnr.: 47864916
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Oxford University Press
- Seitenzahl: 450
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Dezember 2016
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 29mm
- Gewicht: 846g
- ISBN-13: 9780198746959
- ISBN-10: 0198746954
- Artikelnr.: 47864916
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Iñigo González-Ricoy is Assistant Professor of Political Philosophy at the University of Barcelona. He has been postdoctoral fellow at the University of Louvain and Pompeu Fabra University and visiting fellow at Columbia University and Goethe University in Frankfurt. His research is in democratic and constitutional theory, and has been published in the Journal of Applied Philosophy, Social Theory and Practice, and Ratio Juris . Axel Gosseries is a Maitre de recherches at the Fonds de la Recherche Scientifique, Professor at the University of Louvain, Franz Weyr Fellow of the Czech Academy of Sciences, and Distinguished Visiting Professor at the Institute for Future Studies, Stockholm. He is the author of Penser la justice entre les générations (2004) and the co-editor of Intergenerational Justice (OUP, 2009, with Lukas Meyer). He has published numerous papers in philosophy, law, and economics journals, including the Journal of Political Philosophy, Politics, Philosophy & Economics, Loyola of Los Angeles Law Review, New York University Environmental Law Journal, International Economic Review, Economics & Philosophy, and the Journal of Environmental Economics and Management.
* PART 1: INTRODUCTORY CHAPTERS
* 1: Iñigo González-Ricoy and Axel Gosseries: Designing Institutions
for Future Generations: An Introduction
* Institutional Design and Sources of Short-Termism
* PART 2 GENERAL TOOLS AND ISSUES
* 3: Nicholas Vrousalis: Intergenerational Justice: a Primer
* 4: Stéphane Zuber: Measuring Intergenerational Fairness
* 5: Anja Karnein: Can We Represent Future Generations?
* 6: Axel Gosseries: Generational Sovereignty
* PART 3 FUTURE-FOCUSED INSTITUTIONS
* 7: Ludvig Beckman and Fredrik Uggla: The Ombudsman for Future
Generations: Legitimate and Effective?
* 8: Simon Caney: Political Institutions for the Future: A Five-Fold
Package
* 9: John Broome and Duncan K. Foley: A World Climate Bank
* 10: Iñigo González-Ricoy: Constitutionalising Intergenerational
Provisions
* 11: Dennis F. Thompson: Democratic Trusteeship: Institutions to
Protect the Future of the Democratic Process
* 12: Marcel Szabo: A Common Heritage Fund for Future Generations
* 13: Kristian Skagen Ekeli: Electoral Design, Sub-Majority Rules and
Representation for Future Generations
* 14: Chiara Cordelli and Rob Reich: Philanthropy and Intergenerational
Justice
* PART 4 FUTURE-BENEFICIAL INSTITUTIONS
* 15: Simon Niemeyer and Julia Jennstål: The Deliberative Democratic
Inclusion of Future Generations
* 16: Juliana Bidadanure: Youth Quotas, Diversity, and Long-Termism:
Can Young People Act as Proxies for Future Generations?
* 17: Michael K. MacKenzie: A General-Purpose, Randomly Selected
Chamber
* 18: Claudio López-Guerra: Pilotage Responsibility and
Intergenerational Justice
* 19: Karl Widerquist: The People's Endowment
* 20: Virginie Pérotin: Democratic Firms: Assets for the Long-Term
* 21: Jonathan White: Archiving for the Future: the Party Constitution
* 22: Danielle Zwarthoed: Alumni Involvement and Long-Termist
University Governance
* 23: Joakim Sandberg: Pension Funds, Future Generations, and Fiduciary
Duty
* 24: Thomas Baudin and Paula Gobbi: Family Planning is Not
(Necessarily) the Priority Institution for Reducing Fertility
* 1: Iñigo González-Ricoy and Axel Gosseries: Designing Institutions
for Future Generations: An Introduction
* Institutional Design and Sources of Short-Termism
* PART 2 GENERAL TOOLS AND ISSUES
* 3: Nicholas Vrousalis: Intergenerational Justice: a Primer
* 4: Stéphane Zuber: Measuring Intergenerational Fairness
* 5: Anja Karnein: Can We Represent Future Generations?
* 6: Axel Gosseries: Generational Sovereignty
* PART 3 FUTURE-FOCUSED INSTITUTIONS
* 7: Ludvig Beckman and Fredrik Uggla: The Ombudsman for Future
Generations: Legitimate and Effective?
* 8: Simon Caney: Political Institutions for the Future: A Five-Fold
Package
* 9: John Broome and Duncan K. Foley: A World Climate Bank
* 10: Iñigo González-Ricoy: Constitutionalising Intergenerational
Provisions
* 11: Dennis F. Thompson: Democratic Trusteeship: Institutions to
Protect the Future of the Democratic Process
* 12: Marcel Szabo: A Common Heritage Fund for Future Generations
* 13: Kristian Skagen Ekeli: Electoral Design, Sub-Majority Rules and
Representation for Future Generations
* 14: Chiara Cordelli and Rob Reich: Philanthropy and Intergenerational
Justice
* PART 4 FUTURE-BENEFICIAL INSTITUTIONS
* 15: Simon Niemeyer and Julia Jennstål: The Deliberative Democratic
Inclusion of Future Generations
* 16: Juliana Bidadanure: Youth Quotas, Diversity, and Long-Termism:
Can Young People Act as Proxies for Future Generations?
* 17: Michael K. MacKenzie: A General-Purpose, Randomly Selected
Chamber
* 18: Claudio López-Guerra: Pilotage Responsibility and
Intergenerational Justice
* 19: Karl Widerquist: The People's Endowment
* 20: Virginie Pérotin: Democratic Firms: Assets for the Long-Term
* 21: Jonathan White: Archiving for the Future: the Party Constitution
* 22: Danielle Zwarthoed: Alumni Involvement and Long-Termist
University Governance
* 23: Joakim Sandberg: Pension Funds, Future Generations, and Fiduciary
Duty
* 24: Thomas Baudin and Paula Gobbi: Family Planning is Not
(Necessarily) the Priority Institution for Reducing Fertility
* PART 1: INTRODUCTORY CHAPTERS
* 1: Iñigo González-Ricoy and Axel Gosseries: Designing Institutions
for Future Generations: An Introduction
* Institutional Design and Sources of Short-Termism
* PART 2 GENERAL TOOLS AND ISSUES
* 3: Nicholas Vrousalis: Intergenerational Justice: a Primer
* 4: Stéphane Zuber: Measuring Intergenerational Fairness
* 5: Anja Karnein: Can We Represent Future Generations?
* 6: Axel Gosseries: Generational Sovereignty
* PART 3 FUTURE-FOCUSED INSTITUTIONS
* 7: Ludvig Beckman and Fredrik Uggla: The Ombudsman for Future
Generations: Legitimate and Effective?
* 8: Simon Caney: Political Institutions for the Future: A Five-Fold
Package
* 9: John Broome and Duncan K. Foley: A World Climate Bank
* 10: Iñigo González-Ricoy: Constitutionalising Intergenerational
Provisions
* 11: Dennis F. Thompson: Democratic Trusteeship: Institutions to
Protect the Future of the Democratic Process
* 12: Marcel Szabo: A Common Heritage Fund for Future Generations
* 13: Kristian Skagen Ekeli: Electoral Design, Sub-Majority Rules and
Representation for Future Generations
* 14: Chiara Cordelli and Rob Reich: Philanthropy and Intergenerational
Justice
* PART 4 FUTURE-BENEFICIAL INSTITUTIONS
* 15: Simon Niemeyer and Julia Jennstål: The Deliberative Democratic
Inclusion of Future Generations
* 16: Juliana Bidadanure: Youth Quotas, Diversity, and Long-Termism:
Can Young People Act as Proxies for Future Generations?
* 17: Michael K. MacKenzie: A General-Purpose, Randomly Selected
Chamber
* 18: Claudio López-Guerra: Pilotage Responsibility and
Intergenerational Justice
* 19: Karl Widerquist: The People's Endowment
* 20: Virginie Pérotin: Democratic Firms: Assets for the Long-Term
* 21: Jonathan White: Archiving for the Future: the Party Constitution
* 22: Danielle Zwarthoed: Alumni Involvement and Long-Termist
University Governance
* 23: Joakim Sandberg: Pension Funds, Future Generations, and Fiduciary
Duty
* 24: Thomas Baudin and Paula Gobbi: Family Planning is Not
(Necessarily) the Priority Institution for Reducing Fertility
* 1: Iñigo González-Ricoy and Axel Gosseries: Designing Institutions
for Future Generations: An Introduction
* Institutional Design and Sources of Short-Termism
* PART 2 GENERAL TOOLS AND ISSUES
* 3: Nicholas Vrousalis: Intergenerational Justice: a Primer
* 4: Stéphane Zuber: Measuring Intergenerational Fairness
* 5: Anja Karnein: Can We Represent Future Generations?
* 6: Axel Gosseries: Generational Sovereignty
* PART 3 FUTURE-FOCUSED INSTITUTIONS
* 7: Ludvig Beckman and Fredrik Uggla: The Ombudsman for Future
Generations: Legitimate and Effective?
* 8: Simon Caney: Political Institutions for the Future: A Five-Fold
Package
* 9: John Broome and Duncan K. Foley: A World Climate Bank
* 10: Iñigo González-Ricoy: Constitutionalising Intergenerational
Provisions
* 11: Dennis F. Thompson: Democratic Trusteeship: Institutions to
Protect the Future of the Democratic Process
* 12: Marcel Szabo: A Common Heritage Fund for Future Generations
* 13: Kristian Skagen Ekeli: Electoral Design, Sub-Majority Rules and
Representation for Future Generations
* 14: Chiara Cordelli and Rob Reich: Philanthropy and Intergenerational
Justice
* PART 4 FUTURE-BENEFICIAL INSTITUTIONS
* 15: Simon Niemeyer and Julia Jennstål: The Deliberative Democratic
Inclusion of Future Generations
* 16: Juliana Bidadanure: Youth Quotas, Diversity, and Long-Termism:
Can Young People Act as Proxies for Future Generations?
* 17: Michael K. MacKenzie: A General-Purpose, Randomly Selected
Chamber
* 18: Claudio López-Guerra: Pilotage Responsibility and
Intergenerational Justice
* 19: Karl Widerquist: The People's Endowment
* 20: Virginie Pérotin: Democratic Firms: Assets for the Long-Term
* 21: Jonathan White: Archiving for the Future: the Party Constitution
* 22: Danielle Zwarthoed: Alumni Involvement and Long-Termist
University Governance
* 23: Joakim Sandberg: Pension Funds, Future Generations, and Fiduciary
Duty
* 24: Thomas Baudin and Paula Gobbi: Family Planning is Not
(Necessarily) the Priority Institution for Reducing Fertility







