2015
DOI: 10.1017/s089267941500026x
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Unethical Consumption and Obligations to Signal

Abstract: There are many different ways to try to bring about an end to the harms involved in the production of consumer goods. In this article I will start at the bottom, with the individual whose ordinary choices about how to travel, what to eat, what to wear, where to shop, and which policies to support all cause her to confront the possibility of involvement in these harms to the environment, nonhuman animals, and persons.Having dismissed the claim that an individual has a straightforward duty of justice not to cons… Show more

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Cited by 28 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…First, for the natural duty of justice to require nothing, the non-compliancerelated pointlessness of one's efforts has to be genuinely foreseeable, from the perspective of a reasonable person, and with a high enough degree of certainty (Lawford-Smith 2012). Being in doubt about the future efficacy of one's actions in support of political reform does not cancel one's responsibilities.…”
Section: Pervasive Expected Non-compliancementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…First, for the natural duty of justice to require nothing, the non-compliancerelated pointlessness of one's efforts has to be genuinely foreseeable, from the perspective of a reasonable person, and with a high enough degree of certainty (Lawford-Smith 2012). Being in doubt about the future efficacy of one's actions in support of political reform does not cancel one's responsibilities.…”
Section: Pervasive Expected Non-compliancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…21 Thanks to Keith Hyams for suggesting this point. For a detailed discussion of the duty to signal, in the context of ethical consumption, see Lawford-Smith (2015). 22 Thanks to an anonymous reviewer for making this suggestion.…”
Section: Pervasive Expected Non-compliancementioning
confidence: 99%
“…A useful distinction has been made between top‐down responses to these sorts of problems and bottom‐up responses (for example, Lawford‐Smith , 316). Top‐down responses focus on the imposition of regulations by governments or by global institutions, whereas bottom‐up approaches focus on unilateral action by individuals.…”
Section: Addressing Aggregative Harms: Lessons For the Medical Implanmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…33 In the case of climate destabilisation, I fear that even after our best attempts to minimise our contributions and to protest, most of us can neither opt out nor make a difference. Animals cannot speak in voices we are willing to hear; the distant poor are distant and thoroughly disempowered; in the case of climate destabilisation, those who will suffer the worst injustice have not been born.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In some of the collective harm cases, such as factory farming or sweatshop labour, there may be ways of opting out: we are unlikely to make any difference as individuals, but at least we can vote with our feet and make a stand. 33 In the case of climate destabilisation, I fear that even after our best attempts to minimise our contributions and to protest, most of us can neither opt out nor make a difference. 34 In one sense, again, we are unable to alter our social systems and structures of collective action.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%