Sociology 125 Lecture 12 Thinking about equality, inequality and fairness October 16, 2012.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Libertarianism and the Philosophers Lecture 4
Advertisements

Civics: Government and Economics in Action
An Egalitarian Law of Peoples Thomas Pogge
Rawlsian Contract Approach Attempts to reconcile utilitarianism and intuitionism. Attempts to reconcile utilitarianism and intuitionism. Theory of distributive.
Life chances & poverty in the UK
Working with Dignity: Participating in God’s Creation
Government Programs and Social Outcomes: The United States in Comparative Perspective Timothy Smeeding Center for Policy Research, Maxwell School Syracuse.
Opening Plenary - There is an alternative... Richard Wilkinson.
Durkheim vs. Marx (again)
Social Stratification
Contrasting Cold War Terms United States v. Soviet perspective.
What to do about the rich getting richer? Political parties in the 19 th century Europe failed to address the desperate needs of the working people.
L To distribute goods and services fairly, protecting everyone’s right to equal opportunity and bettering the lives of all members of society (liberalism:
Egalitarians View Egalitarians hold that there are no relevant differences among people that can justify unequal treatment. According to the egalitarian,
Stratification.
Module 10 The Role of Government The Canadian Welfare Society and Taxation.
Department of Criminal Justice California State University - Bakersfield CRJU 330 Race, Ethnicity and Criminal Justice Dr. Abu-Lughod, Reem Ali Crime Control.
Thomas Hobbes ( ) l Fear of others in the state of nature (apart from society) prompts people to form governments through a social contract l State.
Deontological tradition Contractualism of John Rawls Discourse ethics.
Social Stratification An Introduction. DO NOW: In your notebook, write down one experience that you have had or have heard about for each of the following:
Unit 5 – Economic Rights Economics Rights of the Citizen.
7 Themes of Catholic Social teaching
Economic Problems: Poverty & Wealth.
Why does inequality matter? The effects of a corrosive force.
Examining Economic Justice
Ten Myths about the Relationship between Taxes and Income Distribution in Thailand Professor Medhi Krongkaew NACC Commissioner.
Lecture 3 Tuesday, September 9 THE MARKET: HOW IT IS SUPPOSED TO WORK.
Equality and Inequality: Perspectives from Political Theory
© 2014 wheresjenny.com Affirmative action AFFIRMATIVE ACTION.
ECONOMICS II 2/2/2012. Learning Objectives Critically analyze social problems by identifying value perspectives and applying concepts of sociology, political.
The National Council on Economic Education/John Templeton Foundation Teaching the Ethical Foundations of Economics Lesson 10: What Is Economic Justice?
 Rawls was influenced by Kant and Aristotle  An American Philosopher  Wrote the Following: A Theory of Justice, Political Liberalism, The Law of Peoples,
Defining & Describing Poverty
Equality is Better For Everyone. Who Are We? Affiliated to the Equality Trust. Working to reduce Income Inequality across the UK.
A Defense of Utilitarianism
What is Economic Justice? Presented by Dr. Norman R Cloutier, Director, University of Wisconsin-Parkside Center for Economic Education, at WCSS, March.
Sociology 125 Lecture 20 DEMOCRACY: HOW IT WORKS November 15, 2012.
Capitalism is an economic system based on PRIVATE OWNERSHIP and the use of CAPITAL ( money). CAPITALISM.
Rawls on justice Michael Lacewing co.uk.
FREE TO CHOOSE CHAPTER 5 CREATED EQUAL. I. INTRODUCTION Define equality What should be the goal of equality? Is it equality of opportunity or equality.
Unit 4: Social Justice & People of Good Character. Learning GoalsSuccess Criteria I will understand what the 7 Themes of Catholic Social Teaching are.
LIBERTY, EQUALITY AND JUSTICE GONDA YUMITRO. LIBERTY Liberty is the ultimate moral ideal. Individuals have rights to life, liberty, and property that.
ECONOMICS 3 2/9/2012. Learning Objectives Critically analyze social problems by identifying value perspectives and applying concepts of sociology, political.
Lecture 3 Tuesday, September 11 THE MARKET: HOW IT IS SUPPOSED TO WORK.
Rising Income Inequality in Canada Senator Art Eggleton.
Public Opinion The Role of Citizen Attitudes and Beliefs in Democracy This presentation is the property of Dr. Kevin Parsneau for use by him and his current.
Free Enterprise System
Three Modern Approaches. Introduction Rawls, Nozick, and MacIntyre Rawls, Nozick, and MacIntyre Have significant new approaches Have significant new approaches.
Rawls & Nozick Liberalism & Libertarianism Warwick Debating Society Training, 11/05/2011.
Social Welfare Policymaking Chapter 18. The Social Welfare Debate Two main types: – Entitlement programs: Government benefits that certain qualified individuals.
 Welfare began during the Great Depression in the 1930s in the United States.  Our country began such a program because of the overwhelming amount of.
Justice/Fairness Approach Learning Plan #5 Sara Deibert, Sara Roxbury, Allie Forsythe, Robert Phillips March 31,2008.
Sociology 125 Lecture 11 Thinking about equality, inequality and fairness October 12, 2010.
Allison Botkin M1L1 BLOG ASSIGNMENT.  Democracy is a type of government where the power is derived from the people based on their preferences  The people.
Sociology 125 Lecture 20 DEMOCRACY: HOW IT WORKS November 13, 2014.
The world is more unequal than at any time since 1945 and inequality continues to grow ‘On average - and taking into account population size - income inequality.
Arthur’s Criticism of Singer Entitlements and “Realistic Morality”
Social Stratification. Discussion Outline Patterns of Social Stratification American Class Inequality Social Mobility and Life Chances.
Essential Question: How did the political theories of socialism and communism reflect the changes brought about by the period of industrialization?
Stratification Chapter 7. Discussion Outline I. Standards of Equality II. Stratification and Types of Stratification III. American Stratification IV.
Theories of Social Stratification. Functional Theory of Social Stratification Basic assumption: Social inequality is universal, therefore inequality must.
Sociology 125 Lectures 19 & 20 DEMOCRACY: HOW IT WORKS November 11 & 16, 2010.
Walk the Line Activity Agree or Disagree There is nothing unjust about having lots of poor people in a rich country. There may not be equal opportunity,
Political theory and law
Excellent film for the themes in this section of the course
CHAPTER 1 Ten Principles of Economics
Stratification Chapter 7.
Theories of justice.
Racism, Sexism and Affirmative Action: Some Key Points
Understand the Major ideas of Capitalism, Socialism, and Communism
Presentation transcript:

Sociology 125 Lecture 12 Thinking about equality, inequality and fairness October 16, 2012

The idea of “social injustice” An inequality is unjust when: (a) the inequality is unfair, and (b) something could in principle be done to eliminate the unfairness.

Cases of Possible Injustice Case 1. A police chief will only hire personal relatives – sons, daughters, cousins – as police officers. Case 2. A small shop-owner is only willing to have his son or daughter become a co-owner of the store. Case 3. A 30 year-old inherits $10 million from a grandfather Case 4. In one of the richest countries in the world, there are millions of people, children and adults, who live in desperate poverty.

Two Conceptions of Justice/injustice: FAIR PLAY vs FAIR SHARES Fair play = Moral judgment about procedures not outcomes. “Fairness” means “equal playing field” -- no discrimination, no special privileges, etc. Result = high levels of inequalities of outcomes are fair so long as the outcomes were obtained through equal opportunity. Fair share = Moral judgment about outcomes, not just procedures. “Fairness” means everyone is entitled to a share of society's resources sufficient to live a dignified, flourishing life (i.e. to have enough to be able to participate fully in the exercise of rights and liberties, to be able to exercise and develop one’s talents).

“How Americans spread the wealth,” by Robert Trigaux, St. Petersburg Times, Sunday October 3

A, preferred by 10% of Americans is the United States B, preferred by 47% of Americans, is Sweden C, preferred by 43% of Americans, isn’t a real place

Defenses of Unjust Inequalities

I.Conflicting Values Some other value may be more important than justice: for example, private property or parental rights

II. Pragmatic Arguments to defend unfair inequality A Pragmatic Argument = an argument that focuses on practical consequences rather than social justice as such.

The Pragmatic Argument in favor of high levels of (unjust) economic inequality Thesis 1: Inequality  incentives  people work harder  prosperity  ultimately benefits the poor Thesis 2: Greater inequality  greater incentives  greater prosperity  greater benefits for the poor Thesis 3:Reducing inequality  reduces incentives  harms the poor Practical policy implication = tax cuts for the very rich; “trickle down” economics

Criticisms of the Pragmatic Argument for Inequality 1.“Endogenous preferences”: increasing inequality affects the incentive-preferences of people 2.The role of power in generating inequality What is the difference between an “incentive” and “extortion”? If a robber holds a gun to your head and says “your money or your life”, is paying the robber an “incentive” for not shooting you? Elites always claim that privilege is necessary as an incentive, but this can just be an exercise of power 3. “Excess Inequality” = more inequality than is really needed for incentives

The Pragmatic Argument against high levels of economic inequality Thesis 1: High Inequality  resentment and conflict  erodes community and cooperation  lowers productivity  reduces prosperity Thesis 2: High inequality  concentrations of wealth  concentrations of power  erodes democracy Thesis 3:High inequality harms almost everyone, even the relatively affluent

Wisconsin

Wilkinson & Pickett, The Spirit Level Social mobility is lower in more unequal countries