Talents and Distributive Justice

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Advantaged Social Positions
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Ceo Position
Children's Human Capital Accumulation
Children’s Human Capital Accumulation
China's Talent
China’s Talent
Developed Talents
Developmental Opportunities
Distributive Justice
educational equality
Educational Justice
educational opportunity distribution
Egalitarian Conception
egalitarian philosophy
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Good Life
High Average IQ
High Level IQ
innate abilities debate
Luck Egalitarian
Marketing Economy
Meritocratic Conception
meritocratic selection
Moral Arbitrariness
National Basketball Association
Natural Lottery
Natural Talent
Pop Stars
social mobility theory
Talent Differentials
Testimonial Injustice
Vice Versa
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Product details

  • ISBN 9781032342627
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Sep 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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For much of its history, the notion of talent has been associated with the idea of ‘careers open to talent’. Its emancipatory promise of upward social mobility has ultimately radically transformed the distribution of advantaged social positions and has had a lasting influence on the very idea of social status itself. Besides its inextricable link with equality of educational opportunity, the notion of talent also came to be associated with some of the most pressing contemporary issues as diverse as the ‘war for talent’, brain drain, immigration policies, talent management, global meritocracy, the ‘excellence gap’, the ‘ownership’ of natural resources, ability taxation, etc.

Nevertheless, while central to egalitarian conceptions of distributive justice, the notion of talent remains to a large extent absent from the voluminous literature on these issues. Unlike concepts traditionally associated with distributive justice, such as fairness, (in)equality, equality of opportunity as well as justice itself, the notion of talent has received only limited examination. This volume brings together a set of contributions discussing some of the most pressing problems and challenges arising out of a reductionist understanding of talents’ anatomy, a distorted characterisation of their overall distributive value or talents’ non-voluntaristic nature and many other issues revolving around talents, which existing conceptions of distributive justice in education leave either neglected or outrightly ignored.

The chapters in this book were originally published in the journal, Educational Philosophy and Theory.

Mitja Sardoč is Senior Research Associate at the Educational Research Institute in Ljubljana (Slovenia). He is author of scholarly articles and editor of a number of journal special issues on citizenship education, multiculturalism, toleration, equality of opportunity, patriotism, radicalisation and violent extremism. He is Managing Editor of Theory and Research in Education, Editor-in-Chief of the Handbook of Patriotism and The Palgrave Handbook of Toleration.