1st Edition

Democracy, Equality, and Justice

Edited By Matt Matravers, Lukas Meyer Copyright 2011
    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    272 Pages
    by Routledge

    In addressing democracy, equality, and justice together, the book stimulates discussions that go beyond the sometimes increasingly technical and increasingly discrete literatures that now dominate the study of each concept. The chapters fall into four categories: on justice and democracy; justice and equality; justice and community; and justice and the future. Concerns of justice unite all the chapters in this volume. However, these concerns now manifest themselves in interesting and new directions. Politically, the book confronts urgent problems of democracy, equality, community, and of how to respond to potentially catastrophic climate change. The response to these problems cannot only be pragmatic and piecemeal. What emerges are a number of interlinking questions and themes that together constitute the central core of contemporary political philosophy.

    This book was previously published as a special issue of the Critical Review of Social and Political Philosophy.

    1. Introduction: Democracy, Equality, and Justice  Matt Matravers and Lukas H. Meyer  Justice and Democracy  2. Representing Future Generations: Political Presentism and Democratic Trusteeship Dennis F. Thompson  3. Justice, Legitimacy, and Constitutional Rights Wilfried Hinsch  Justice and Quality  4. Why Equality? On Justifying Liberal Egalitarianism Paul Kelly  5. Luck, Equality and Responsibility Keith Dowding  6. Coercive Redistribution and Public Agreement: Re-Evaluating the Libertarian Challenge of Charity Clare Chambers and Philip Parvin  Justice and Community  7. Human Rights and Moral Cosmopolitanism Charles Jones  8. On the Interrelations between Domestic and Global (In)Justice Peter Koller  9. Cultural Diversity and Biodiversity: A Tempting Analogy David Heyd  10. Linguistic Justice and the Territorial Imperative Philippe Van Parijs  Justice and the Future  11. Climate Change and the Duties of the Advantaged Simon Caney  12. Climate Justice and Historical Emissions Lukas H. Meyer and Dominic Roser

    Biography

    Matt Matravers is Professor of Political Philosophy at the University of York. He is the author of Justice and Punishment (Oxford University Press, 2000) and Responsibility and Justice (Polity Press, 2007) as well as of numerous articles and chapters on political and legal philosophy.

    Lukas H. Meyer is Professor of Practical Philosophy, University of Berne. He is the author of Historische Gerechtigkeit (de Gruyter, 2005), editor of Intergenerational Justice (Oxford University Press, 2009) and Legitimacy, Justice and Public International Law (Cambridge University Press, 2009), as well as of numerous articles and chapters on political and legal philosophy.

    'Many of these papers emerged from a symposium hosted by the British Academy which was inspired by the work of Brian Barry, to whom the volume is dedicated. Part of its success, however, lies in the editors' willingness to stretch the boundaries of what Barry meant by liberalism, but in doing so they bring liberal theory into better alignment with contemporary concerns underlying liberal societies. In all, this is a masterful literature review through selected articles that make a number of connections between the ways that democracy, equality and justice have changed since the 1980s.' Vidhu Verma, Jawaharlal Nehru University, Political Theory Journal