This volume explores how excessive economic inequality gives the best-off considerably more political influence than average citizens, thereby violating political equality.
This volume explores how excessive economic inequality gives the best-off considerably more political influence than average citizens, thereby violating political equality.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Nunzio Alì is a postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Political and Social Sciences at the University of Catania, Italy, and a former postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Political Science at the University of Sao Paulo, Brazil (2018-2020). He holds a PhD in Philosophy from the Federal University of Santa Catarina, Brazil (2018), and is the coordinator of the Colloquium Philosophy & Global Affairs (Department of Political and Social Sciences - University of Catania). His main research interests concern theories of justice, economic inequality, power, and human rights.
Inhaltsangabe
Acknowledgements Introduction: What Is Wrong, If Anything, with Economic Inequality? 1 Who Has the Power to Establish and Shape Primary Rules? Why the Size of Material Inequality Matters 2 What Does It Mean to Be Dominated? 3 Inequality and Proportionality in Current Distributive Theories of Justice 4 The Principle of Proportionality Conclusion Index
Acknowledgements
Introduction: What Is Wrong, If Anything, with Economic Inequality?
1 Who Has the Power to Establish and Shape Primary Rules? Why the Size of Material Inequality Matters
2 What Does It Mean to Be Dominated?
3 Inequality and Proportionality in Current Distributive Theories of Justice
Acknowledgements Introduction: What Is Wrong, If Anything, with Economic Inequality? 1 Who Has the Power to Establish and Shape Primary Rules? Why the Size of Material Inequality Matters 2 What Does It Mean to Be Dominated? 3 Inequality and Proportionality in Current Distributive Theories of Justice 4 The Principle of Proportionality Conclusion Index
Acknowledgements
Introduction: What Is Wrong, If Anything, with Economic Inequality?
1 Who Has the Power to Establish and Shape Primary Rules? Why the Size of Material Inequality Matters
2 What Does It Mean to Be Dominated?
3 Inequality and Proportionality in Current Distributive Theories of Justice
4 The Principle of Proportionality
Conclusion
Index
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