Sustainable development, global governance and justice

Project management: Prof. Dr. Darrel Moellendorf

Bitter poverty, massive social inequalities and climate change are some of the most pressing problems facing humanity. Billions of people live in extreme poverty and are equally threatened by the crises of the global financial system and the effects of climate change. One of the most important moral reasons to address climate change is its direct relevance to people in economic hardship.
The starting point of the research project was the assumption that mitigation of and adaptation to climate change impacts and poverty reduction cannot be seen as separate policy objectives. The extreme deprivation and particular vulnerability of people living in poverty cannot be reconciled with an international order based on the concept of human dignity as understood in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Persistent poverty, growing social inequality and rising CO2 emissions are signs of gross misguided developments in the current system of global governance.
Within research field 1, research on politics and institutions is not understood unilaterally as a process in which power, rule and violence or long-term structures and other factors are understood as “external” factors, but as a process in which norms and normative orientations play a central role. Numerous questions posed by the problem of climate change also provided an opportunity to ask fundamental moral questions about the possible emergence of a just international normative order. The concept of the “right to sustainable development” can play an important role in the arguments of poor countries, according to which international climate protection policy must not set back their legitimate development goals. There is also a kind of intergenerational normative order that emerges with particular urgency in this context. The idea that people who are alive now have a moral obligation to future generations to combat climate change justifies climate protection policy, but also requires specific forms of justification itself.
This research project encompassed moral philosophy and political theory discussions, analyses of international organizations and institutions, as well as the investigation of suitable courses of action that bring about social change. In particular, the PI’s research examined the social and normative connection between climate change and poverty. The dissertation project by research associate Daniel Callies entitled “Intentionally Manipulating the Climate: The Ethics and Governance of Climate Engineering”, looked in particular at possible arguments against climate engineering research.

The most important events and lectures in this project:

Lecture: Progress, Destruction, and the Anthropocene (by Darrel Moellendorf), University of Duisburg-Essen, May 2017.

Lecture: Progress, Destruction, and the Anthropocene (by Darrel Moellendorf), Liberty Fund/Social Philosophy and Policy conference, Redondo Beach, June 2017.

Workshop: Author-Meets-Critic Section on his The Moral Challenge of Dangerous Climate Change (by Darrel Moellendorf), ECPR Prague, September 2016.

Presentation: “Climate Engineering and Playing God” (by Daniel Callies), Warwick Graduate Conference on Political and Legal Theory, University of Warwick, England, February 2016.

Presentation: “Institutional Legitimacy and Solar Radiation Management” (by Daniel Callies), Science, Technology, and Public Policy Fellows Workshop, Harvard University, November 2016.

The most important publications in this project:

Moellendorf, Darrel: “Taking UNFCCC Norms Seriously”, in: D. Roser and J. Heyward (eds.): Climate Change and Non-Ideal Theory, Oxford University Press, 2016, pp. 104-124.

Moellendorf, Darrel: “Can Dangerous Climate Change Be Avoided”, Global Justice Theory Practice Rhetoric 8, 2016, [online] http://publikationen.stub.uni-frankfurt.de/index.php/gjn [05.10.2017].

Moellendorf, Darrel: “Global Distributive Justice: The Cosmopolitan Point of View,” in: D. Held and P. Maffettone (eds.): Global Political Theory, London: Polity Press, 2016.

Moellendorf, Darrel and Axel Schaffer: “Equalizing the Intergenerational Burdens of Climate Change-An Alternative to Discounted Utilitarianism”, Midwest Studies in Philosophy XL, 2016, pp. 43-62.

Moellendorf, Darrel: “The Moral Challenge of Dangerous Climate Change: Values, Poverty, and Policy”, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014.

people in this project:

Project management / contact person

Moellendorf, Darrel, Prof. Dr.

Project staff

Visak, Tatjana

News from the research center

Event
02.06.2026 | Brussels

Zusammenhalt, Vertrauen und Demokratie in Europa

Panel Discussion, Lecture

Vertrauen, Zusammenhalt, Demokratie – drei große Begriff, die in Europa derzeit allgegenwärtig sind. Doch wie belastbar sind sie eigentlich und was beschreiben sie? Was genau meinen wir eigentlich, wenn wir von politischem Vertrauen und gesellschaftlichem Zusammenhalt sprechen? Und braucht es – wie häufig behauptet – ein gewisses Maß an sozialer oder kultureller Homogenität, damit Vertrauen wachsen und Zusammenhalt entstehen kann? Diesen Fragen widmen wir uns in der aktuellen Ausgabe der Crisis Talks – auf dem Podium und im Gespräch mit unseren Gästen.

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Event
22.06.2026 | Frankfurt am Main

Rechtsextremismus und Polizei - Erscheinungsformen, Umgangsweisen, Perspektiven

Panel Discussion

Die Diskussion knüpft an den Sammelband „Rechtsextremismus als Herausforderung für Polizei und Gesellschaft“ an, der aktuelle Perspektiven aus Wissenschaft, Praxis und Zivilgesellschaft zusammenführt.

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News
18.05.2026

Videopodcast-Reihe „Our Planet, Our Health“ gestartet

Mit „Our Planet, Our Health“ startet eine neue Videopodcast-Reihe zu Fragen globaler Gesundheitsgerechtigkeit. Die Reihe, gehostet von Dr. Romina Rekers, ist eine Initiative des Global Health Justice Postdoctoral Programme (GHJ), gefördert von der Höppschen Stiftung.

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Publication
12.05.2026 | Online article

Disinhibited Informalization: Talk Radio, Bro Podcasts and the Aesthetics of Populism

This essay by Johannes Völz is a revised and updated translation of “Enthemmte Informalisierung: Talk Radio, Bro-Podcasts und die Ästhetik des Populismus,” WestEnd: Neue Zeitschrift für Sozialforschung 22.2 (2025): 3–24. It is published here as part of the b2o Review’s “Stop the Right” dossier.

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Event
27.05.2026 | Frankfurt

Von der Selbstermächtigung zum sozialen Widerstand

Lecture

Vortrag von Prof. Dr. Axel Honneth (Frankfurt am Main / New York Columbia University) mit anschließender Diskussion im Rahmen des Rechtstheoretischen Mittwochsseminars von Klaus Günther, Dan Wielsch und Benno Zabel.

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Event
25./26.06.2026 | Frankfurt

Shifting Regimes, Changing Orders

Conference

Conference as part of WDC2026 in collaboration with Deutsche Gesellschaft für Designtheorie und -forschung (DGTF), Kunstgewerbemuseum/Design Campus SKD and Design and Democracy

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Event
28./29.05.2026 | Frankfurt am Main

Global Health Justice: Principles and Practice

Conference

Following the research focus of the Global Health Justice Postdoctoral Programme, funded by Höppsche Stiftung, the "Global Health Justice: Principles and Practice" conference places a particular emphasis on themes such as the human right to health, political activism and health justice issues, and problems of structural injustice and vulnerable populations in health care. Keynote lectures by Jonathan Wolff and Kanchana Mahadevan. The Global Health Justice Programme and this conference are supported by the Höppsche Stiftung in Villmar.

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Event
14.07.2026 | Frankfurt am Main

Democracy Over Time and the Climate Crisis

Lecture Series

Vortrag von Anja Karnein (Binghamton). Die Vortragsreihe untersucht Fragen der Klimakrise als Herausforderungen für demokratische Gesellschaften und konzentriert sich auf Themen wie politische Legitimität, Widerstand gegen fossile Brennstoffe und die Interessen künftiger Generationen. Sie wird organisiert von Prof. Dr. Darrel Moellendorf und Dr. Lukas Sparenborg.

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