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The principle of constituted identities and the obligation to include

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Smith_2008.pdf
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Author(s)
Smith, Rogers M
Keywords
democracy
identity
culture
interest (s)
GE Subjects
Political ethics
Ethics of law
Rights based legal ethics

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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/174170
Abstract
Most analysts agree that democratic theorists have not offered a persuasive answer to the question of how the boundaries of a demos, a democratic people, should legitimately be defined. Some contend that boundaries should be maintained in ways that preserve sufficient sense of common identity to sustain support for redistributive policies. Many others endorse the ‘principle of all affected interests,’ but it has been widely criticized as unrealistically destructive of too many existing community boundaries. This essay argues for an alternative ‘principle of constituted identities.’ It holds that, subject to certain important qualifications, modern constitutional democracies, at least, are morally obligated to extend the option of full membership to all those whose identities have been substantially constituted through such regimes’ coercive policies.
Date
2008
Type
Article
Copyright/License
Creative Commons Copyright (CC 2.5)
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