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Justin Clark

University of Alaska, Anchorage
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  • University of Alaska, Anchorage
    Department of Philosophy
    Graduate student
Anchorage, Alaska, United States of America
Areas of Interest
Metaphysics
Social and Political Philosophy
  • All publications (4)
  • Examining the Hayek-Friedman hypothesis on economic and political freedom
    with R. A. Lawson
    Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization 74. 2010.
    Friedrich HayekSocial and Political Philosophy
  • The slave whisperer rides the frontier : horseface minstrelsy in the western
    In Sarah E. McFarland & Ryan Hediger (eds.), Animals and agency: an interdisciplinary exploration, Brill. 2009.
    Animal Ethics
  •  178
    Suppressing liberty, censoring information, wasting resources, and calling it good for the environment: J. R. Clark and Dwight R. Lee
    Social Philosophy and Policy 26 (2): 272-295. 2009.
    This paper considers prevailing environmental policy in the United States with the emphasis on liberty, markets, utilizing information, entrepreneurial discovery, and the economic analysis of political decisions. The general discussion is illustrated by the concern over global warming and policies for addressing this concern. The political incentives to confront environmental problems directly with mandates, restrictions, and subsidies ignore the power of liberty and market incentives to solve p…Read more
    This paper considers prevailing environmental policy in the United States with the emphasis on liberty, markets, utilizing information, entrepreneurial discovery, and the economic analysis of political decisions. The general discussion is illustrated by the concern over global warming and policies for addressing this concern. The political incentives to confront environmental problems directly with mandates, restrictions, and subsidies ignore the power of liberty and market incentives to solve problems by fostering an impressive network of information transfer, increasing innovation, and expanding prosperity. Indeed, most environmental policies systematically suppress liberty, censor the communication of information, and retard innovation and prosperity, with the result that they provide less environmental quality at greater cost than is possible. While such flawed policies might be justified in cases where pollution problems pose clear, serious, and immediate threats, we argue this is not true of global warming, and the most effective response to concerns over carbon emissions may be limiting the discretionary power of government to take direct action and rely on the indirect effects of liberty and market incentives to move us beyond the petroleum age more quickly and efficiently than will result from the direct action of government.
    Value TheoryTopics in Environmental EthicsFreedom and Liberty
  •  198
    Book Reviews : A Kind of Life Imposed on Man: vocation and social order from Tyndale to Locke, by Paul Marshall. University of Toronto Press, 1996. 163 pp. hb. £32.50. ISBN 0-8020-0784-8
    Studies in Christian Ethics 11 (1): 99-102. 1998.
    ChristianityLocke: Political LegitimacyLocke: Political Obligation
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