Skip to main content

The journalism you need right now

Since Donald Trump took office, the news cycle has hit a frenetic new pitch. The daily torrent of push alerts, breaking news, and viral outrages has been relentless — and exhausting. It’s hard to tell what is real and what’s just bluster. That’s why our attention is focused on helping you make sense of it all. We want to explain what truly matters and how to think about it

We rely on readers like you to fund our journalism. Will you support our work and become a Vox Member today?

Join today

Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò is building a theory of justice for a warming world

The tangled nature of climate change and colonialism means justice has to account for both.

Illustrated portrait of Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò
Illustrated portrait of Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò
Lauren Tamaki for Vox

Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò is building a theory of justice for a warming world

The tangled nature of climate change and colonialism means justice has to account for both.

Oshan Jarow
Oshan Jarow is a staff writer with Vox’s Future Perfect, where he focuses on the frontiers of political economy and consciousness studies. He covers topics ranging from guaranteed income and shorter workweeks to meditation and psychedelics.

As climate change intensifies, so too does the risk that it will sustain and solidify injustices from the past well into the future. Rising sea levels and more frequent extreme weather events disproportionately affect populations who continue to suffer the legacies of colonialism and slavery, and global warming is worsening economic inequalities between the Global North and South.

The depth of the problem makes devising adequate solutions tricky, but if we succeed, we can make lasting progress in addressing both climate change and systemic inequality.

That’s precisely what the work of Olúfẹ́mi O. Táíwò, a professor of philosophy at Georgetown University, helps us think through. Across his first two books, Reconsidering Reparations and Elite Capture, and a series of public discussions, Táíwò’s work has been described as a “theory of everything” that weaves an idea of justice where climate and colonialism come together. The connection is now being recognized by the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, which wrote in its 2022 report: “Present development challenges causing high vulnerability are influenced by historical and ongoing patterns of inequity such as colonialism.”

For example, desertification and wildfires are far more common in communities where colonizers banned land-use practices such as subsistence farming and controlled burns. Patterns of pollution exposure that disproportionately affect marginalized groups can also be traced back to colonial practices.

Táíwò’s vision draws past and future into an account of not only the injustices of our ancestors, but our own roles as ancestors to future generations. Will we leave them a world in perpetual need of Band-Aids to mitigate structural harms, or can we build a world that is just by default?

Our methodology

To select this year’s Future Perfect 50, our team went through a months-long process. Starting with last year’s list, we brainstormed, researched deeply, and connected with our audience and sources. We didn’t want to overrepresent in any one category, so we aimed for diversity in theories of change, academic specialities, age, geographic location, identity, and many other criteria.

To learn more about the FP50 methodology and criteria, go here.

In Reconsidering Reparations, Táíwò challenges the theory of justice developed by the American philosopher John Rawls. The Rawlsian idea, which has been described by my colleague Dylan Matthews as “the most influential work of political philosophy in the last 50 years,” argues that justice is achieved through principles that everyone would agree to from behind a “veil of ignorance,” before knowing the actual circumstances of their lives.

Táíwò argues that there are two major problems. First, those principles were to be agreed upon primarily by “societies,” but Rawls’s definition of a society reads much like a domestic state. Some forces of injustice — like the consequences of colonialism, or the patterns of global wealth accumulation set in place by the industrial revolution — operate outside what states alone can regulate. In Rawls’s theory, Táíwò writes, “domestic justice takes precedence, and global justice plays second fiddle.”

Second, deliberating behind a veil of ignorance lends itself toward what Táíwò calls a “snapshot view” of justice. This view, he argues, fails to recognize the processual role of history in creating the present circumstances against which we judge what justice means. With a snapshot, he writes that we’re viewing “a moment in the unfolding of a process, a glimpse of the system becoming what it will be tomorrow.” That process could convert what looks like justice today into a source of injustice in future generations.

This is the threat Táíwò argues climate change poses to certain forms of reparative justice, like cutting checks as a form of reparations. Cash transfers, for example, could be rendered moot by the additional costs recipients might incur from the disproportionate impacts of climate change.

“I propose something called the ‘constructive view,’” Táíwò told Nonprofit Quarterly. “We need to build different institutions, rebuild some institutions that exist already, and change who has power — not just money.”

Philosophies of justice can lean abstract, but Táíwò doesn’t shy away from engaging with the particulars of getting from here to there. He’s written about establishing a publicly owned carbon removal authority in the US, detailed how the IMF’s “Special Drawing Rights” can serve as a step toward global reparations while supporting the urgent need for climate adaptation, and co-authored a report on how restructuring and canceling the debt that locks poor countries in a “doom loop” can help achieve climate justice.

While global warming demands urgent action, “remaking the entire planetary system of human social relations in the direction of justice,” as Táíwò puts it, is a generational project. We’re born into a world that will continue to be made over centuries, he argues: “If we think in that way, the scale of the thing that we’re trying to accomplish won’t scare us away from doing what we can in the time that we have.”

John Green’s crusade to make the world “suck less”John Green’s crusade to make the world “suck less”
Future Perfect

Tuberculosis is still the world’s top killer. The author has a plan to fight back.

By Dylan Scott
Chef José Andrés knows how to feed people in a crisisChef José Andrés knows how to feed people in a crisis
Future Perfect

From Gaza to Asheville to Valencia, the celebrity chef understands

By Izzie Ramirez
The 2024 Future Perfect 50The 2024 Future Perfect 50
Future Perfect

Welcome to our third annual celebration of the thinkers, innovators, and changemakers who are working to make the future a better place.

By Bryan Walsh and Izzie Ramirez
What would a world with abundant energy look like? Materials scientist Deb Chachra has an idea.What would a world with abundant energy look like? Materials scientist Deb Chachra has an idea.
Future Perfect

The “How Infrastructure Works” author wants us to envision achievable utopias.

By Izzie Ramirez
Only 1 percent of neuroscience faculty is Black. Kaela Singleton hopes to change that.Only 1 percent of neuroscience faculty is Black. Kaela Singleton hopes to change that.
Future Perfect

Whatever you do, don’t call the Black in Neuro founder “resilient.”

By Celia Ford
Neuroscientist Rafael Yuste could play your brain like an instrument. He wants to protect it instead.Neuroscientist Rafael Yuste could play your brain like an instrument. He wants to protect it instead.
Future Perfect

Your brain needs new rights. He’s fighting to secure them.

By Sigal Samuel