When Does
Ethics Become Global?
Delving into
understanding ethics
Global ethics can be defined as “an area
of critical ethical enquiry into the nature and justification of values and
norms that are global in kind and into the various issues that arise …”
Based on Prof. Heather Widdows,
University of Birmingham, “Global Ethics is the ethics of a globalised world”
Then, what are global ethical issues
like? Any kind of trouble whose impact is at a global scale is subject of
analysis by moral philosophy. Among this kind of ethical problems, the
following can be mentioned:
Gender
Inequality |
An
example of this type of unethical practice has to do with how much women are
paid for their work when compared to men in the very same positions.
Shouldn’t all individuals get paid evenly and justly? |
Life-Risking
Migration |
Consider
what happens in the Mediterranean Sea with African migrants intending to
reach European shores in Greece or Italy on barges because of their
poverty-stricken nations and living conditions. |
Body
Parts’ Sale |
What
about individuals around the globe who live below the poverty line and decide
to “sell” a kidney for a millionaire in Israel? Should this type of organs
trade be allowed by governments? Can this be labeled as “exploitation?” |
Plastic |
And
what can be said about the extensive use of plastic in the last 40 years?
This is not just polluting the urban landscape but also destroying marine
ecosystems that people in coastline cities live on. Should this simply be
banned around the world? |
Pandemics |
Another
example is the way a country deals with an endemic viral disease of theirs
and the way it can affect millions of other individuals in neighboring
countries and beyond its geographical location. How should a nation be
penalized for an ethical conduct in the treatment of diseases? |
The
list and explanation of other global issues can go on and on. Yet any single
ethical thought can have a great and lasting effect on people who are being
affected because of an “immoral” conduct of a company, government, and the
like.
To sum up, global ethics is “a mixture
of justice, basic rights, and fair distribution,” as it is stated by Prof.
Widdows
References
Dower, N. (2009). Global Ethics. (R. C. Elliot, Ed.)
Institutional Issues Involving Ethics and Justice, Vol. 1, 232-251.
The Open University. (2020 (a)). Global Ethics. Retrieved October
22, 2020, from FurureLearn.Com:
https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/global-ethics/3/steps/905594
The Open University. (2020 (b)). Global Ethics, All in it Together.
Retrieved October 23, 2020, from FutureLearn.Com:
https://www.futurelearn.com/courses/global-ethics/3/steps/905595
Week 1b - When Does Ethics Become Global by Jonathan Acuña on Scribd
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