Presentation of ethical assessment strategies and inspirational artistic interventions - Presented by Pieter van Boheemen at EID Rio de Janeiro on May 13, 2016
2. Friday - Grande Festa
Time Topic / Activity
10:00 – 11:00 Recap & intervention techniques
11:00 – 13:00 Preparing public intervention
13:00 – 14:00 Lunch break
14:00 – 16:00 Public intervention
16:00 – 17:00 Final presentations
3. Resilient Cities Seminar
• Arjen Uijterlinde, Dutch Consul-General in Rio de Janeiro, Brasil
• Han Peters, Ambassador of the Kingdom of the Netherlands to Brazil
• Claudia Gintersdorfer, Deputy Head of the European Union Delegation in Brasilia.
• Pedro Junqueira, CEO, Center of Operations Rio de Janeiro
• Frank Kresin, Research Director, Waag Society
• Tina Billeter Weymann, Sustainability Consultant
• Catarina Selada, Head of Cities Department, INTELI Innovation Centre
• Luciana Nery, Deputy Chief Resilience Officer, Center of Operations Rio de Janeiro
• Marco Contardi, Strategic Advisor, FGV Projetos
• Ricardo Ruiz, Project Coordinator, InCiti Research and Innovation for Cities &
Federal University of Pernambuco
• Clarisse Linke, Country Director, Institute for Transportation and Development
Policy Brasil
• Mark van der Net, Founder, OSCity
• Pieter van Boheemen, Programme Manager, Waag Society
• Gabriela Augustini, Founder and Director, Olabi Makerspace
• Chloe Dickson, Co-Founder, BeMap
• Ronaldo Lemos, Founder and Director, ITS Rio
• Fabio Palma, Director, Istituto Europeo di Design
• Washington Fajardo, President, Rio World Heritage Institute and Mayors’ Special
Advisor for Urban Issues
• Luisa Santiago, Managing Director, Ellen MacArthur Foundation
http://resilientcities.com.br/index.php/programme-info/
9. Classical Ethics: Ethical Matrix
• Columns: relevant principles
• f.e. autonomy, justice, etc
• Rows: relevant stakeholders (max 4)
• f.e. parents, neighbours, policy makers, etc
Stakeholders/actors
(human + non-human)
Consequentialistic
principles
(arguments that concern
the outcomes of an act)
Deontological principles
(arguments that concern
the act itself)
https://www.lincoln.ac.uk/home/lifesciences/visitingscholars/professorbenmepham/
10. Example: Food Industry
Wellbeing Autonomy Justice
People in the
industry
Income &
working
conditions
Freedom of
action
Fair trade
Citizens
Food safety &
quality
Informed
choices
Availability &
Affordability
Farm Animals Animal welfare
Behavioural
freedom
Intrinsic value
The
environment
Conservation Biodiversity Sustainability
11. The Triangle
• Acknowledging our duty to follow (principle(s) X) and our estimation of
(the facts Y) it follows that .. is (not) morally allowed.
Based on: Daniels, Norman, "Reflective Equilibrium", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Winter 2013 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.)
URL: http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/reflective-equilibrium/