Distributive Justice

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A01=Michael Allingham
Author_Michael Allingham
Brute Luck
Category=QDTS
compensation mechanisms
Contingent Commodities
Current Time Slice Principles
Deathbed Gifts
Distribution D1
Distributive justice
Dworkin
Dworkin's Equality
Economics
End State Principles
Entitlement Theory
Envy Test
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
Feasible Distributions
Full Self-ownership
Gifts Inter Vivos
Hypothetical Insurance Market
Income Rights
justice theory analysis
Law
liberal egalitarianism
liberty versus equality
Lockean Proviso
Maximin Rule
moral arbitrariness
Nozick
Nozick's Entitlements Theory
Option Luck
Pareto Efficient Distributions
philosophical perspectives on fairness
Political philosophy
Politics
Primary Goods
Primary Social Goods
resource allocation ethics
Steiner-Vallentyne
Taste Model
Theory of politics
Transcendental Institutionalism
Vice Versa
Walrasian Equilibrium
Welfare economics

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415859110
  • Weight: 340g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Mar 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book presents a critical appraisal of the main theories of distributive justice. It develops the view that all such theories, or at least all liberal theories, may be seen as expressions of laissez-faire with compensations for factors that they consider to be morally arbitrary.

More precisely, these theories are interpreted as specifying that the outcome of individuals acting independently, without the intervention of any central authority, is just, provided that those who fare ill for reasons that the theories deem to be arbitrary, for example, because they have fewer talents than others, receive compensation from those who fare well. The principal theories discussed are Rawls’s justice as fairness, Dworkin’s equality of resources, what may loosely be called Steiner-Vallentyne common ownership theories, and Nozick’s entitlements theory.

The book considers the extent, if any, to which the theories examined can accommodate both liberty and equality. It concludes that if any such accommodation is possible it will be found in common ownership theories.

Michael Allingham is a Fellow of Magdalen College, Oxford.

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