
This Book Defends An Original And Pluralist Theory Of When And Why Discrimination Wrongs People. Starting From Actual Legal Cases In Which Claimants Have Alleged Wrongful Discrimination By Other People Or By The State, Sophia Moreau Argues That We Can Best Understand These People's Complaints By Thinking Of Them As Complaints About Different Ways In Which They Have Not Been Treated As Equals In Their Societies -in Particular, Through Unfair Subordination, Through The Violation Of Their Right To A Particular Deliberative Freedom, Or Through The Denial To Them Of Access To A Basic Good, That Is, A Good That This Person Must Have Access To If They Are To Be, And To Be Seen As, An Equal In Their Society. The Book Devotes A Chapter To Each Of These Wrongs, Exploring In Detail What Unfair Subordination Consists In; What Deliberative Freedoms Are, And When Each Of Us Has A Right To Them; And What It Means To Deny Someone Access To A Basic Good. The Author Explains Why These Wrongs Are Each Distinctive, But Are Each A Different Way Of Failing To Treat Some People As The Equals Of Others. Finally The Author Argues That Both The State And We As Individuals Have A Duty To Treat Others As Equals, In These Three Specific Senses--
This book investigates the moral foundations of discrimination by proposing a pluralist theory that identifies when and why specific acts of exclusion constitute a wrong. Sophia Reibetanz Moreau, a legal scholar, utilizes a framework grounded in contemporary jurisprudence and normative ethics to analyze how individuals and the state fail to treat citizens as equals. By examining actual legal cases, she argues that discrimination is not a monolithic concept but rather a failure to uphold equality through three distinct mechanisms: unfair subordination, the violation of deliberative freedom, and the denial of access to basic goods.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Legal scholars and philosophers frequently cite this work as a rigorous contribution to the normative theory of equality. Experts highlight the book's ability to bridge abstract ethical principles with the practical realities of courtroom litigation.
Page Count:
0
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
ISBN-10:
019092733X
ISBN-13:
9780190927332
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