The Feasible Alternatives Thesis

Author:

Barry Christian1,Øverland Gerhard2

Affiliation:

1. Australian National University, Australia

2. University of Oslo, Norway

Abstract

Many assert that affluent countries have contributed in the past to poverty in developing countries through wars of aggression and conquest, colonialism and its legacies, the imposition of puppet leaders, and support for brutal dictators and venal elites. Thomas Pogge has recently argued that there is an additional and, arguably, even more consequential way in which the affluent continue to contribute to poverty in the developing world. He argues that when people cooperate in instituting and upholding institutional arrangements that foreseeably result in more severe or more widespread poverty or human rights deficits than would foreseeably result under feasible alternative arrangements, they are contributors to these harms. Because of this, he argues, they have stringent, contribution-based (or negative) duties to address this poverty. We will call this the ‘Feasible Alternatives Thesis' (FAT), and our aim in this article is to examine it critically.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Sociology and Political Science,Philosophy

Reference29 articles.

1. Barry C, Øverland G (n.d.) The doing, allowing, and enabling distinction. Unpublished manuscript.

2. Ducking Harm

3. Rights and the Doctrine of Doing and Allowing

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