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Bjørn Ralf Kristensen

University of OregonIllinois Institute of Technology
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    13
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    2

 More details
  • University of Oregon
    Environmental Studies
    Department of Philosophy
    Doctoral student
  • Illinois Institute of Technology
    Center for The Study of Ethics In The Professions
    Sawyier Fellow
APA Western Division
Email (login required)
Homepage
Chicago, Illinois, United States of America
0000-0002-5694-7880
Areas of Specialization
Animal Ethics
Applied Ethics
Environmental Philosophy
Environmental Ethics
American Pragmatism
John Dewey
Ecofeminism
Non-Human Animals
Public Health
Medical Ethics
5 more
Areas of Interest
Critical Animal Studies
Environmental Justice
Hermeneutics
Philosophy of Food and Drink
Disability
Philosophy of Religion
Philosophy of Sport
Consequentialism
3 more
  • All publications (13)
  •  1
    Beyond the Grid: Navigating Water Supply and Sanitation Service Ecosystems in Informal Settlements
    with Ana Casas, Paul Hutchings, Andrew R. Bell, Beata Kupiec-Teahan, Amy R. Lewis, José Mendoza Sanchez, Simon Willcock, Fiona Anciano, Dani J. Barrington, Mmeli Dube, Caroline Karani, Arturo Llaxacondor, Hellen López, Anna L. Mdee, Alesia D. Ofori, Joy N. Riungu, Kory C. Russel, and Alison Parker
    PLoS ONE 21 (3): 1-14. 2026.
    Hundreds of millions of people living in urban informal settlements rely on irregular and unsafe water supply and sanitation services. To meet their needs, they must navigate fragmented service delivery environments and use multiple different water and sanitation facilities. Using high-frequency longitudinal survey data from three informal settlements in Kenya, Peru and South Africa, we document the variability in water supply and sanitation service access. Across the year-long study period, 62–…Read more
    Hundreds of millions of people living in urban informal settlements rely on irregular and unsafe water supply and sanitation services. To meet their needs, they must navigate fragmented service delivery environments and use multiple different water and sanitation facilities. Using high-frequency longitudinal survey data from three informal settlements in Kenya, Peru and South Africa, we document the variability in water supply and sanitation service access. Across the year-long study period, 62–73% of respondents across all contexts changed their primary toilet, with 10–27% reporting five or more different primary facilities, with similar variability in water access. High levels of disruption were reported, with issues related to crowding/queuing, breakdowns, and physical barriers disrupting accessibility all contributing to the churn of services. To explain the results, we develop the concept of a “service ecosystem” to describe how people living in urban informal settlements rely on multiple water supply and sanitation services simultaneously and how these patterns of access shift over time. Using James C Scott’s theory of legibility, we argue that this irregularity means these service ecosystems are largely illegible within formal monitoring frameworks, that typically categorise households by a primary service. This leads to an information deficit for policymakers and practitioners who have a mandate to improve services in these environments. We further develop the implications of service ecosystems by calling for policymakers and service providers to recognise and support a diversity of service systems which have sufficient redundancy between them to meet the needs of populations, at least until broader structural reforms can address the underlying challenges in these settings.
    Social Sciences, Misc
  •  28
    Plumwood's Intentional Recognition Stance: More-than-Human Agency Beyond Conscious Intention
    Medium. 2022.
    Animal EthicsEcofeminismEnvironmental Philosophy
  •  28
    Rethinking Domestication Pathways in the Context of Anthrodependency
    Medium. 2022.
    Animal EthicsConservation Ethics
  •  39
    Welcome to the Viralocene: Transcorporeality and Peripheral Justice in an Age of Pandemics
    Medium. 2020.
    Animal EthicsPublic HealthFeminist Ethics
  •  11
    Toward the research and development of cultured meat for captive carnivorous animals
    In Svenja Springer & Herwig Grimm (eds.), Professionals in food chains, Wageningen Academic Publishers. pp. 152-156. 2018.
    Food EthicsAnimal Captivity
  •  19
    Viennese hamsters and the interspecies politics of urban space
    In Hanna Schübel & Ivo Wallimann-Helmer (eds.), Justice and food security in a changing climate, Wageningen Academic Publishers. pp. 230-235. 2021.
    EcofeminismAnimal EthicsConservation Ethics
  •  46
    Anthrodependency, Zoonoses, and Relational Spillover
    In Irus Braverman (ed.), More-than-One Health: Humans, Animals, and the Environment Post-COVID, Routledge. pp. 193-208. 2022.
    John DeweyAnimal EthicsAmerican PragmatismPublic Health
  •  149
    Companions in Conflict: Animals in Occupied Palestine (review)
    Journal of Holy Land and Palestine Studies 19 (2): 237-239. 2020.
  •  87
    Consequentialism in the Work of John Dewey and Peter Singer: Considering the Case of Effective Altruism
    The Pluralist 20 (1): 41-57. 2025.
    John Dewey and the prominent contemporary public philosopher Peter Singer both give naturalistic consequentialist accounts calling for actionable steps within present contexts. In the following pages, I put Dewey and Singer in conversation, focusing on commonalities and differences in their moral approaches, and in particular their diverging conceptions of how individuals can be understood within moral problems. My motivations for this writing stem from a sympathy for the ideals put forward by t…Read more
    John Dewey and the prominent contemporary public philosopher Peter Singer both give naturalistic consequentialist accounts calling for actionable steps within present contexts. In the following pages, I put Dewey and Singer in conversation, focusing on commonalities and differences in their moral approaches, and in particular their diverging conceptions of how individuals can be understood within moral problems. My motivations for this writing stem from a sympathy for the ideals put forward by the effective altruism movement, an influential approach inspired largely by Singer. Effective altruism (EA) has been particularly influential in the contemporary animal protection movement, a community that I count myself... Read More.
    American PragmatismVarieties of ConsequentialismEffective AltruismJohn DeweyVarieties of Utilitarian…Read more
    American PragmatismVarieties of ConsequentialismEffective AltruismJohn DeweyVarieties of Utilitarianism
  •  30
    Lori Gruen, ed. Critical Terms for Animal Studies (review)
    Environmental Ethics 43 (3): 285-286. 2021.
  •  38
    Kelly Struthers Montford and Chloë Taylor, eds. Colonialism and Animality: Anti-Colonial Perspectives in Critical Animal Studies (review)
    Environmental Ethics 43 (1): 85-88. 2021.
  •  22
    Animal Ethics and the Nonconformist Conscience (The Palgrave Macmillan Animal Ethics Series) (review)
    Reading Religion 5 (1). 2019.
    Animal Ethics and the Nonconformist Conscience is an illuminating text which examines the historical roots of the animal advocacy movement in the theology of the nonconformist tradition. In this work of interdisciplinary scope transcending the fields of theology, history, and philosophy, Phillip J. Sampson not only traces these roots, but also sets forth an active call to reevaluate the current paradigm of animal advocacy toward the inclusion of nonconformist principles. This is an innovative bo…Read more
    Animal Ethics and the Nonconformist Conscience is an illuminating text which examines the historical roots of the animal advocacy movement in the theology of the nonconformist tradition. In this work of interdisciplinary scope transcending the fields of theology, history, and philosophy, Phillip J. Sampson not only traces these roots, but also sets forth an active call to reevaluate the current paradigm of animal advocacy toward the inclusion of nonconformist principles. This is an innovative book that presents a largely unknown tradition of Christian thought that not only influences contemporary perspectives with regard to animals, but challenges conventional hang-ups stemming from enlightenment and neo-Darwinian reason. It will be of interest within both secular and religious circles, and to those working in animal ethics and more broadly within animal studies and environmental humanities.
    Animal Ethics
  •  55
    T. J. Kasperbauer: Subhuman: The Moral Psychology of Human Attitudes to Animals (review)
    Environmental Ethics 41 (1): 93-94. 2019.
    Environmental Ethics
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