Continuity, Attribution, and Loss and Damage

Publication date

2025-12

Authors

Draper, JamieISNI 0000000506628891

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

This paper critically assesses the theory of loss and damage developed in Laura García-Portela's (2025) Rectifying Climate Injustice: Reparations for Loss and Damage. The keystones in García-Portela’s theory are her “minimal capability” interpretation of loss and damage, her “continuity account” of historical responsibility for climate change, and her “adequacy-for-purpose” account of attribution in climate science. In this paper, I focus primarily on the latter two of these elements. I begin by raising a problem of indeterminacy for the continuity account of historical responsibility. Then, I examine some external and internal limits to the adequacy-for-purpose account of attribution science. Finally, I conclude by raising a broader issue about the conception of reparations that figures within García-Portela’s account.

Keywords

SDG 13 - Climate Action

Citation

Draper, J 2025, 'Continuity, Attribution, and Loss and Damage', Erasmus Journal for Philosophy and Economics, vol. 18, no. 2. https://doi.org/10.23941/ejpe.v18i2.999