Democratic Distributive Justice.
ZUCKER, Ross:
Sold by Ted Kottler, Bookseller, Redondo Beach, CA, U.S.A.
AbeBooks Seller since 5 January 2002
Used - Hardcover
Condition: Used - Near fine
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketSold by Ted Kottler, Bookseller, Redondo Beach, CA, U.S.A.
AbeBooks Seller since 5 January 2002
Condition: Used - Near fine
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketFirst Edition. x, 336 pp. Original cloth. Near Fine, in near fine dust jacket. Review copy, with slip. 'By exploring the integral relationship between democracy and economic justice, this study explains how democratic countries with market systems should deal with the problem of high levels of income-inequality. The book provides an interdisciplinary approach that combines political, economic, and legal theory. It also analyzes the nature of economic society and the considerations bearing upon the ethics of relative pay, such as the nature of individual contributions and the extent of community' (Cambridge University Press Web site). 'Zucker's book is of particular interest for its methodological structure, which allows the author to deal with issues now at the center of the debate.The wide scope of the analysis provided by the method adopted allows the author to deal with many significant perspectives: from Locke to Marx, from Keynes to Rawls and Dworkin, from the communitarians to Dahl.The book has the merit of demonstrating, by contrast to the view of modern economic theory, that capital-based market systems are characterized by a dimension of community on a systemwide scale and that democracy necessarily involves rule in accord with redistributory property rights. Distributive justice is a crucial problem both from a theoretical and a practical point of view in a renewed democracy willing to go beyond the persistent liberal model derived from Locke' (Thomas Casadei, Ratio Juris: An International Journal of Jurisprudence and Philosophy of Law). Contents 1. Democracy and economic justice; Part I. Unequal Property and Individualism in Liberal Theory: 2. The underlying logic of liberal property theory; 3. Unequal property and its premise in Locke s theory; 4. Unequal property and individualism, Kant to Rawls; Part II. Egalitarian Property and Justice as Dueness: 5. Whose property is it, anyway?; 6. The social nature of economic actors and forms of equal dueness; 7. Policy reflections: the effect of an egalitarian regime on economic growth; Part III. Egalitarian Property and the Ethics of Economic Community: 8. Deriving equality from community; 9. The dimension of community in capital-based market systems: between consumers and producers; 10. The dimension of community in capital-based market systems: between capital and labor; 12. The right to an equal share of part of national income; Part IV. Democracy and Economic Justice; 13. Democratic distributive justice; 14. Democracy and economic rights.
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