TY - BOOK AU - de Vries,Annick AU - Werner,Gijsbert AU - Wijlhuizen,Elsenoor AU - Toom,Victor AU - Bovens,Mark AU - Hulscher,Suzanne ED - SpringerLink (Online service) TI - Justice in Climate Policy: Distributing Climate Costs Fairly T2 - Research for Policy, Studies by the Netherlands Scientific Council for Government Policy, SN - 9783031594274 AV - JA79 U1 - 172 23 PY - 2024/// CY - Cham PB - Springer Nature Switzerland, Imprint: Springer KW - Political ethics KW - Bioclimatology KW - Social justice KW - Climatology KW - Political Ethics KW - Climate Change Ecology KW - Social Justice KW - Climate Sciences N1 - Distributing climate costs fairly -- Distributive justice -- Distributing the Dutch reduction targets -- Energy transition subsidies -- Flood protection policies -- Damage after extreme rainfall -- Procedural justice and distributive issues -- Public perspectives of distribution issues -- Distributive justice in climate policy; Open Access N2 - This open access book is looking into ways to achieve just climate policy within a country. The authors of this monograph share a unique, timely and original vision: continuous support for climate policy is more likely to emerge when citizens find that the distribution of the bill for climate costs is fair. But what is a fair distribution of climate costs? This is an important question because financial costs of mitigation (reducing greenhouse gases), adaptation (adapting to climate change) and damage (compensating or compensating after weather extremes) increase significantly in the coming decades. Drawing on philosophy and ethics, the authors propose ten principles for achieving just distributions of domestic climate costs. Examples of such principles are individual responsibility, the polluter pays, greatest utility and capacity to pay. Yet what a fair distribution is, depends on, for example, political preferences and the policy issue at hand. Empirical research on designing climate policies, however, shows that distributive principles are not part of the political, policy, and public discussions. The authors therefore argue that explicit attention to principles of just distribution at the start of a policy process contributes to support for climate policy. This book provides tools to professionals and students to achieve justice in climate policy UR - https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-59427-4 ER -