The Oxford handbook of distributive justice
Serena Olsaretti (Editor)
"Distributive justice has come to the fore in political philosophy in recent decades: how should we arrange our social and economic institutions so as to distribute fairly the benefits and burdens of social cooperation? Thirty-eight leading figures from philosophy and political theory present specially written critical assessments of the state of research into a broad range of questions about distributive justice. The first seventeen chapters consider how to understand distributive justice and its importance in our world. The remaining fifteen chapters investigate questions about the implementation of distributive justice with regard to a range of aspects of society, including gender, race, the family, education, work, health, language, migration, and climate change"--Book jacket
Print Book,English, 2018
First editionView all formats and editions
Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2018
xiv, 735 pages ; 25 cm.
9780199645121, 0199645124
1013820392
Serena Olsaretti: Introduction: The Idea of Distributive JusticeI: Contemporary Approaches1: Samuel Freeman: Rawls on Distributive Justice and the Difference Principle2: Richard Arneson: Dworkin and Luck Egalitarianism: A Comparison3: Michael Otsuka & Alex Voorhoeve: Equality versus Priority4: Gillian Brock: Sufficiency and Needs-Based Approaches5: Ingrid Robeyns: The Capability Approach6: Joseph Mazor & Peter Vallentyne: Libertarianism, Left and Right -7: Jeffrey Moriarty: Desert-Based JusticeII: Distributive Justice and Other Virtues8: Larry Alexander: Retributive Justice9: Stephen Wall: The Good Society10: Virginia Held: The Ethics of Care11: Colin Bird: The Theory and Politics of RecognitionIII: Foundational Disputes12: Paula Casal: Distributive justice and Human Nature13: Chad Van Shoelandt & Gerald Gaus: Political and Distributive Justice14: Jonathan Quong: Consequentialism and Deontology15: David Schmidtz: Ideal Justice16: Aaron James: Constructivism, Intuitionism, Ecumenism17: Matthew Kramer: Conceptual AnalysisIV: The Application of Distributive Justice18: Anca Gheaus: Gender19: Colin Macleod: The Family20: Matthew Clayton: Education21: Shlomi Segall: Health22: Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen: Discrimination23: Bernard R. Boxill: Race24: Paul Gomberg: Work25: Ben Ferguson and Hillel Steiner: Exploitation26: David Miller and Isaac Taylor: Public Goods27: Peter Jones: Cultural and Religious Minorities28: Alan Patten: Language29: Michael Blake: Justice Beyond Borders30: Sarah Fine: Migration31: Simon Caney: Climate Change32: Rahul Kumar: Future Generations