Plural Values and Heterogeneous Situations. Considerations on the Scope for a Political Theory of Justice
Emanuela Ceva
University of Pavia, Department of Political and Social Sciences
July 1, 2007
European Journal of Political Theory, 6(3), 2007. pp. 359-375.
Abstract:
This paper aims to investigate the way in which a political theory of justice should respond to the endorsement of pluralism. After offering reasons in support of the necessity for such a theory to take pluralism seriously, an argument is put forward for its characterisation in minimal and procedural terms. However, taking issue with the straightforward relationship of implication identified by a number of scholars between pluralism and procedural justice, this paper contends that a direct relation can only be established between pluralism and the need to define a minimal theory of justice, i.e. a theory that assumes as little as possible in terms of values and views of the world. Its procedural formulation is seen, instead, as a consequence of the limited predictive power of theory facing the heterogeneous situations with which it is expected to deal.
Number of Pages in PDF File: 21
Keywords: Justice, Justification, Pluralism, Procedural Justice, Substantive Justice, Theories of Justice
Full text available at: http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=2354883
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