241 R. Rozzi et al. (eds.), Linking Ecology and Ethics for a Changing World: Values,
Philosophy, and Action, Ecology and Ethics 1, DOI 10.1007/978-94-007-7470-4_20,
© Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2013
Abstract Dangerous climate change was first defined as globally averaged
warming of 2° above the pre-industrial average by an economist, not a natural
scientist. A global average rise of 2° equates to significantly more climatological
effects in some earth regions. Food and energy price rises sparked by rising tem-
peratures and enduring drought in the Middle East and North Africa, combined
with increased pumping of ground water, are implicated in the rise of civil con-
flict, revolution, and war in these regions since 2009. The inability of industrial
civilisation to adapt to the climatological limits of the biosphere arises from the
refusal of liberal economists and others to recognize that justice is contextual to
the boundaried nature of political communities, and to the limits of the earth sys-
tem. In the history of Western culture, discourses about justice first appear in
association with the development of agriculture and irrigation systems in
Mesopotamian cultures. Agriculture in the Levant made possible more densely
populated societies, and the division of labour. It also permitted the emergence of
great inequality and slavery. Hebrew discourses of government and justice evolved
which sustained limits on the asymmetric distribution of land and its product in a
bordered political community. These discourses also suggest that just land distri-
bution not only makes for solidarity in self-sufficient communities, but for benign
climates. Modern liberal theories of justice as procedural, and grounded in politi-
cal rights and freedoms, miss the antique contextualisation of standards of justice
in political and economic communities, and the role of restraints on power and
wealth, and territorial limits, in the construction of justice.
Chapter 20
Whose Danger, Which Climate?
Mesopotamian versus Liberal Accounts
of Climate Justice
Michael S. Northcott
M.S. Northcott (*)
School of Divinity, New College, University of Edinburgh,
Mound Place, Edinburgh EH1 2LX, UK
e-mail: M.Northcott@ed.ac.uk