Indigene Klimapolitik und Generationengerechtigkeit
Abstract
This paper proposes a concept of justice for future people that is mindful of Indigenous critiques of the so-called »Anthropocene«. I first review these critiques, which suggest that motivating pro-futural care by dreading an impending climate crisis tends to betray a privileged, often settler-colonial perspective.
The beneficiaries of colonialism now have the »luxury« of viewing the environmental crisis as one that lies
mostly in the future, while many Indigenous communities have been living with such a crisis for a long time.
I then review various Indigenous accounts of intergenerational relations, in which I find the wide-spread
claim that present generations owe to descendants because they received gifts from ancestors as well as
the land. I elaborate this view as what I call asymmetrical reciprocity among generations. The final section
argues that this view can help to demarginalize the future: above all, by disallowing a linear view of time
according to which a focus on the future permits the neglect of the past. Hence, climate ethics and intergenerational
justice must face the history of colonialism.