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Models of justice evoked in published scientific studies of plastic pollution

FACETS 2023 12 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 40 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
I. Walker, I. Walker, I. Walker, Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron I. Walker, Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Rui Liu, Rui Liu, Rui Liu, Rui Liu, I. Walker, Elise Earles, Rui Liu, Elise Earles, Max Liboiron Rui Liu, Rui Liu, Rui Liu, Rui Liu, Rui Liu, I. Walker, Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Rui Liu, Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron Max Liboiron

Summary

This study analyzed 755 scientific publications on plastic pollution and found that all invoked at least one implicit model of justice — most commonly developmental, distributive, or procedural justice — calling for researchers to be more intentional about the ethical frameworks they apply in plastic pollution science.

An exponentially growing body of international research engages with plastic pollution using different ideas on the right ways to frame, research, and intervene in the problem. The premise of this study is that all scientists work with understandings of what is right and wrong and why that is (models of justice) in their research, even when it is not explicitly stated, reflected upon, or a conscious part of the discussion. We surveyed 755 published articles on marine debris and plastic chemical additives and found that all evoked at least one model of justice, and often more. The most routinely used models included: developmental justice, distributive justice, and procedural justice. More rarely, we found appeals to environment-first justice and Indigenous sovereignty. While occasionally these multiple models worked synergistically, more often they conflicted. Our findings ground a call for fellow researchers to use a more intentional and systematic approach to evoking models of justice in our work. Our goal is to offer descriptions and insights about models of justice that are already being deployed to increase the sophistication of the ethical and normative orientations of our research and our fields, both in plastic pollution sciences and beyond.

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