Personal carbon allowances in the liberal age: technical feasibility, ecological significance, economic sustainability and moral acceptability
Scano, Riccardo (A.A. 2021/2022) Personal carbon allowances in the liberal age: technical feasibility, ecological significance, economic sustainability and moral acceptability. Tesi di Laurea in International political theory, Luiss Guido Carli, relatore Valentina Gentile, pp. 180. [Master's Degree Thesis]
Full text for this thesis not available from the repository.
Abstract/Index
The systemic precondition of digitalization. Planes of the digital domain: a brief introduction. Democratizing smart devices. Embracing surveillance capitalism. The convenient context of the green revolution. The UN consensus from Stockholm to COP26. The EU emissions trading system. Theoretical updates and practical proposals in the post-pandemic era. Personal carbon allowances & trading. Theoretical background and complementary analytical tools. Theory and practice of an end-user ETS. The smartphone variable: shifting the overton window. Problematizing PCAs: the EU case study. Climate change and global justice: from diachronic to synchronic. PCAs and a (more) just EU: procedural fairness and the problem of authority. PCAs & PCT in the western civilization. Technical feasibility: the West is not one. Ecological significance: the “cloud” is not a cloud. Economic sustainability: a green premium to prevent secular stagnation. Moral acceptability: China’s social credit system and the ethical state.
References
Bibliografia: pp. 134-144.
Thesis Type: | Master's Degree Thesis |
---|---|
Institution: | Luiss Guido Carli |
Degree Program: | Master's Degree Programs > Master's Degree Program in International Relations (LM-52) |
Chair: | International political theory |
Thesis Supervisor: | Gentile, Valentina |
Thesis Co-Supervisor: | Giordano, Alfonso |
Academic Year: | 2021/2022 |
Session: | Extraordinary |
Deposited by: | Alessandro Perfetti |
Date Deposited: | 20 Jun 2023 15:35 |
Last Modified: | 20 Jun 2023 15:35 |
URI: | https://tesi.luiss.it/id/eprint/35961 |
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