A Strange Defense of Climate Democracy

Issue Date January 2025
Volume 36
Issue 1
Page Numbers 162–168
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In their contribution to this symposium on climate and democracy, Lazar and Wallace seek to defend democracy against an authoritarian alternative. This essay objects to two elements of their argument: first, that climate change is an urgent but essentially ordinary policy problem; and second, that in responding to the problem of climate change, humanity must choose between status quo democratic regimes and authoritarian alternatives. Against Lazar and Wallace, the author argues that our best hope to achieve democratically legitimate climate outcomes is to increase the democratic legitimacy of our institutions. Deliberative institutions like citizens’ climate assemblies can offer improved reasoning that reflects the broad democratic interests.

About the Author

Elisabeth Ellis is professor of philosophy and director of the Philosophy, Politics, and Economics Program at Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka/University of Otago in New Zealand.

View all work by Elisabeth Ellis

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