Litcius/Paper detail

Restorative Energy Justice

Richard Wallsgrove

2022UCLA Journal of Environmental Law and Policy14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

While distributive justice and procedural justice have received substantial attention from energy scholars, recent work identifies restorative justice as an underdeveloped component of the energy justice framework. As conceived in the context of criminal law, restorative justice seeks to more precisely account for harms and obligations that arise from wrongdoing, and to widen the circle of participation in repairing those harms. Restorative environmental justice wields these principles to advance the environmental justice framework beyond a tight focus on disparate environmental and health impacts. Restorative energy justice faces the challenge of deploying this restorative approach in an energy landscape that is often tightly focused on technology choices and business concerns. In Hawai‘i, we find an opportunity to operationalize the concept of restorative energy justice. The origin of Hawai‘i’s regulated electricity industry is indelibly intertwined with the illegal overthrow of the Hawaiian Kingdom. By incorporating a restorative approach that more fully considers the implications of those roots, energy regulators can better account for the future costs and benefits associated with Hawai‘i’s effort to decarbonize its electricity system. In turn, this improved accounting can reduce the risk that the urgency of decarbonization will be placed in a false tension with the imperative of justice.

Topics & Concepts

Restorative justiceEnvironmental justiceContext (archaeology)WrongdoingEconomic JusticeSociologyCriminal justiceLaw and economicsBusinessPublic relationsCriminologyLawPolitical scienceBiologyPaleontologyWildlife Conservation and Criminology AnalysesEnvironmental law and policy