How Groups Matter

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Affi Rmative Action Programs
Agent Structure Problem
Agential Capacities
Aggregate Eff Ects
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Category=JHB
Category=JHBA
Category=JP
Category=QDTS
Common Language
Cultural Defense
Determining Group Membership
DGA
Diff Erential
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Group Agency
Group Diff Erentiated Rights
Group Related Diff Erences
Islamic Exceptionalism
Minority Religious Groups
Participatory Goods
Recognition Respect
Roma Category
Roma Groups
Roma Minority
Romani Nation
Societal Culture
Ultimate Moral Concern
Unchosen Feature
Vice Versa
Violates

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415659505
  • Weight: 630g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Jan 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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When groups feature in political philosophy, it is usually in one of three contexts: the redressing of past or current injustices suffered by ethnic or cultural minorities; the nature and scope of group rights; and questions around how institutions are supposed to treat a certain specific identity/cultural/ethnic group. What is missing from these debates is a comprehensive analysis of groups as both agents and objects of social policies. While this has been subject to much scrutiny by sociologists and social psychologists, it has received less attention from a normative and philosophical point of view. This volume asks: what problems are posed to political philosophy by a collection of individuals who act or are treated in a collective way? Focusing not only on ways in which institutions should treat groups, but also on the normative implications of considering groups as possible social agents, when acting either in vertical relations with the state or in horizontal relations with other groups (or individuals), this book explores these issues from both theoretical and practical perspectives. Contributors address both the nature of political and social philosophy itself, and the ways in which specific issues – affirmative action, race, religion and places of worship, the rights of states – have become political and social priorities.

Gideon Calder is Reader in Ethics and Social Philosophy at the University of South Wales. Magali Bessone is Assistant Professor in Political Philosophy at University of Rennes 1, and a Junior Member of the Institut Universitaire de France. Federico Zuolo is Research Fellow at the University of Pavia, Italy.