This book delivers the first comprehensive development of a liberal conception of relational equality as a demand of social justice. Liberal egalitarian theories holding that justice requires a form of distributive equality in goods such as resources have been dominant for much of the last 50 years. Recently they have been subject to critique by relational egalitarians, who hold that the value of equality does not primarily require that people receive equal shares of some good, but that they relate as social equals, unencumbered by hierarchies of power and social status.
This book delivers the first comprehensive development of a liberal conception of relational equality as a demand of social justice. Liberal egalitarian theories holding that justice requires a form of distributive equality in goods such as resources have been dominant for much of the last 50 years. Recently they have been subject to critique by relational egalitarians, who hold that the value of equality does not primarily require that people receive equal shares of some good, but that they relate as social equals, unencumbered by hierarchies of power and social status.
Christian Schemmel is Senior Lecturer in Political Theory at the University of Manchester. His interests include theories of social justice and equality, liberalism and republicanism, global justice, and the intersection of political theory and political economy.
Inhaltsangabe
Part I: Liberal Relational Egalitarianism Chapter 1: Justice and Egalitarian Relations Chapter 2: Distributive and Relational Equality Chapter 3: Liberal Non-Domination Chapter 4: The Demands of Liberal Non-Domination Chapter 5: Relational Equality Beyond Non-Domination Chapter 6: Social Status, Self-Respect, and Opportunity Part II: Implications Chapter 7: Political Equality Chapter 8: Distributive Justice Chapter 9: Health Inequality Conclusion
Part I: Liberal Relational Egalitarianism Chapter 1: Justice and Egalitarian Relations Chapter 2: Distributive and Relational Equality Chapter 3: Liberal Non-Domination Chapter 4: The Demands of Liberal Non-Domination Chapter 5: Relational Equality Beyond Non-Domination Chapter 6: Social Status, Self-Respect, and Opportunity Part II: Implications Chapter 7: Political Equality Chapter 8: Distributive Justice Chapter 9: Health Inequality Conclusion
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