Box 1: Combining Global Equality and Planetary Habitability
The Global Justice Report describes desirable future scenarios combining two key
goals: socioeconomic equality (including full equality between countries, full gender
equality in labour hours and pay, sharp compression of within country income and
wealth scales, combined with fair access to education, health and political voice),
and planetary habitability (aligning global resource use within ecological boundaries,
including a limitation of global temperature rise below 2°C).
To avoid climate catastrophes, we show that sufficiency is required: a structural
transformation of the economy involving shorter working hours, a lower material
footprint, a shift from material-intensive sectors toward relatively immaterial sectors
such as education and health, and major changes in food systems and land use. Rapid
decarbonization of energy systems is also necessary, as is the sharp compression of
income and wealth inequality. This compression is both a social justice objective and
a condition for financing necessary climate investment and human capital expenditure
and for sustaining political support from bottom- and middle-income classes in both
the North and the South.
Box 2: Material and Monetary Accounting for Democratic Debate
Economy and ecology cannot be debated apart: every economic activity has a
material footprint, every ecological policy shapes incomes and wealth. To make
these links visible, the Global Justice Report uses multidimensional social progress
indicators. We set quantitative targets for global socioeconomic justice by combining
two complementary languages: material accounting (work hours, sectoral shares,
education and health, energy systems, GHG emissions, land use, forest cover,
temperature levels) and monetary accounting (income and wealth scales between
and within countries, progressive tax rates). The report draws on two centuries of
historical data on global inequality and resource use, and on the recent literature on
social progress, climate and colonial reparations.
The Global Justice Report proposes a quantitatively and institutionally grounded
step toward global justice. It does not seek to close the debate: it offers a
transparent basis on which citizens, unions, parliaments, and international bodies
can debate, contest, and decide the course of the coming decades.
...
Chancel, L., Dietrich, J., Mohren, C., Moshrif, R.,
Odersky, M., Piketty, T., Somanchi, A., et al. (2026), The Global Justice Report:
A Plan for Equality & Prosperity Within Planetary Boundaries, World Inequality
Lab (gjp.wid.world).
individual
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INTERPERSONAL : SCIENCES
humanistic ------------------------------- mechanistic
SOCIOLOGY : POLITICAL
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Previously: 'wealth' : 'poverty' : 'social justice'
My source: BBC Radio 4 World at One.