1st Edition
Is Mandatory Retirement Morally Defensible? Ethics, Economics, and Law in Ageing Societies
1: Is Mandatory Retirement Morally Defensible? 2: Why Mandatory Retirement Is Not Necessarily Wrong 3: Mandatory Retirement and Arbitrary Power 4: Is A Mandatory Retirement Age Compatible with Liberal Principles? 5: The “Fair Innings” Argument for Mandatory Retirement: A Critique 6: Ageism and Bona Fide Occupational Qualifications 7: Ageing and Mandatory Retirement -- Considerations from the Economic, Legal, and Moral Perspectives 8: Is Mandatory Retirement Always Efficient? 9: Old-Age Employment and Mandatory Retirement 10: The Legal Construction of the Work-Retirement Nexus: Rethinking the Employment Classification of Older Workers in China
Biography
Hon-Lam Li is Distinguished Professor of Medical Humanities at Southeast University, Emeritus Professor in the Department of Philosophy at the Chinese University of Hong Kong, and Affiliate Professor of Bioethics at the University of Washington School of Medicine. He has published extensively in moral, political, and legal philosophy. His current interest focuses on moral contractualism and its implications for practical issues.
“The question of mandatory retirement raises issues of equality, freedom, respect, and the just distribution of resources between birth cohorts and across individuals’ life course. By bringing together scholars from eastern and western jurisdictions, this collection is unprecedented in the range of perspectives it brings to this issue.”
Daniel Halliday, Professor of Philosophy, The University of Melbourne






