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Green criminology and fracking in the UK: an application of utilitarian ethics

journal contribution
posted on 2024-03-01, 10:05 authored by Jack Lampkin
<p>Fracking is a controversial hydrocarbon extraction technique with the UK public, but the passing of the Infrastructure Act 2015 has made fracking in the UK imminent. This paper attempts to conduct a cost-benefit analysis of the potential social and environmental risks and benefits of fracking in order to provide a lens through which to guide public policy on the issue. The classic philosophical theory of utilitarianism is outlined and then re- applied to the assessment of the risks and benefits of fracking. This re-application comes to the conclusion that fracking should not be instigated by the UK government under the principle of utility based on the equal consideration of all people’s interests. Instead, the paper calls for the increased use of renewable forms of energy as a solution to the utilitarian outlook on the UK’s energy policy, in line with the UK publics energy generation preferences.</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • Lincoln Law School (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Papers from the British Criminology Conference

Volume

16

Issue

2

Pages/Article Number

20-37

Publisher

British Society of Criminology

ISSN

1759-0043

eISSN

1759-0043

Date Submitted

2017-03-04

Date Accepted

2016-11-23

Date of First Publication

2016-12-20

Date of Final Publication

2016-12-20

Date Document First Uploaded

2017-03-03

ePrints ID

26618

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