Abstract

As the world prepares for the opening of the Paris Climate Change conference, AJIL Unbound is pleased to offer a set of reflections on Laudato Si’, Pope Francis’ Encyclical Letter On Care for Our Common Home.1 Released in May 2015, it has generated much commentary and debate, both because of its contents and its source. Pope Francis is calling on the world to rethink the relationships among the economy, the environment and morality, and to develop a spiritually grounded ethic that will inform institutions. We have a wonderful and diverse set of authors to engage with the Encyclical. We begin with a philosophical perspective from Dale Jamieson, who characterizes the work as one of moral theology, rather than a political intervention.2 He situates the Pope’s views within contemporary philosophy, and explains that what the Pope is hoping to do is to stimulate an ethical conversation on environment and development, rather than make a narrowly political intervention. Dan Bodansky takes a more practical view.3 Any impact of the Encyclical, he argues, will likely have more to do with the person of the author than the novelty of the arguments, which draw on themes familiar from the environmental movement. And while agreeing that climate change is a moral issue, Bodansky warns that it is an economic and technological one too. Economic and technological tools may help us to address the problem, and should not be rejected out of hand. Dinah Shelton points out that other religious traditions have environmental ethics as well, implying that there is potential for a grand coalition of moral thinkers on the question.4 Complementing this demonstration of the compatibility of the Pope’s ideas with those of other faiths, Ileana Porras then situates the Encyclical within the tradition of Catholic social thought.5 She shows how it is at the same time a radical document and one that fits squarely in its own religious tradition. Her perspective provides helpful framing for non-Catholic readers to understand the goals and idiom of the document and how it interacts with law.

Highlights

  • INTRODUCTION TO SYMPOSIUMTHE POPE'S ENCYCLICAL AND CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY Tom Ginsburg*As the world prepares for the opening of the Paris Climate Change conference, AJIL Unbound is pleased to offer a set of reflections on Laudato Si’, Pope Francis’ Encyclical Letter On Care for Our Common Home.[1]

  • Pope Francis is calling on the world to rethink the relationships among the economy, the environment and morality, and to develop a spiritually grounded ethic that will inform institutions

  • He situates the Pope’s views within contemporary philosophy, and explains that what the Pope is hoping to do is to stimulate an ethical conversation on environment and development, rather than make a narrowly political intervention

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Summary

Introduction

INTRODUCTION TO SYMPOSIUMTHE POPE'S ENCYCLICAL AND CLIMATE CHANGE POLICY Tom Ginsburg*As the world prepares for the opening of the Paris Climate Change conference, AJIL Unbound is pleased to offer a set of reflections on Laudato Si’, Pope Francis’ Encyclical Letter On Care for Our Common Home.[1]. As the world prepares for the opening of the Paris Climate Change conference, AJIL Unbound is pleased to offer a set of reflections on Laudato Si’, Pope Francis’ Encyclical Letter On Care for Our Common Home.[1] Released in May 2015, it has generated much commentary and debate, both because of its contents and its source.

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