1st Edition
Authenticity, Autonomy and Multiculturalism
Selected Contents: 1. Authenticity and the Multiculturalism Debates Geoffrey Brahm Levey Part 1: Individual Autonomy and Cultural Identity 2. Autonomy and Social Disorientation John Christman 3. Autonomy and Multiculturalism Anna Elisabetta Galeotti 4. Belief, Autonomy and Responsibility: The Case of Indirect Religious Discrimination Peter Jones Part 2: Debating Preference and Cultural Authenticity 5. Against Authenticity Anne Phillips 6. Individual or Collective Autonomy and/or Cultural Authenticity? In Defense of Minimalism Veit Bader 7. Authenticity and the Third-Person Perspective Ben Colburn Part 3: Pluralizing Authenticity 8. What is Wrong with a Liberal Assessment of Religious Authenticity? Avigail Eisenberg 9. Analyzing "Authenticity" in the Litigation of Cultural Claims: Reflections on the Role of Expertise Alison Dundes Renteln and Marie-Claire Foblets 10. Authenticity and Jewish Self-Hatred Marilyn Friedman
Biography
Geoffrey Brahm Levey is an Australian Research Council Future Fellow and Associate Professor in Political Science at the University of New South Wales, Sydney.
"In this extraordinarily rich collection of essays, Levey and colleagues examine the complex relationships in political theory and public policy between autonomy and authenticity, on the one hand, and liberalism and cultural rights, on the other. Of particular importance are the critical reflections throughout the volume on the costs and pay-offs of ideas of authenticity in confronting real-world dilemmas."—John R. Bowen, Washington University in St. Louis
"This book is an important contribution to a topic that is of urgent significance. It brings together the leading authors on the topic who discuss the key theoretical and practical issues that are relevant in increasingly multicultural liberal democracies."—Maleiha Malik, King's College London, UK






