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Justice in Context

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Author(s)
Buckley, Michael
Keywords
justice
contextualism
global distributive justice
justification
John Rawls
David Miller
GE Subjects
Global ethics
Political ethics
Ethics of law
Rights based legal ethics
Governance and ethics

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URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12424/188922
Abstract
Moral and political philosophers are increasingly using empirical data to inform their normative theories. This has sparked renewed interest into questions concerning the relationship between facts and principles. A recent attempt to frame these questions within a broader approach to normative theory comes from David Miller, who has on several occasions defended ‘contextualism’ as the best approach to justice. Miller argues that the context of distribution itself brings one or another political principle into play. This paper examines this claim. It considers several plausible strategies for carrying out Miller’s general project and argues that each strategy fails. Nevertheless, the author maintains that an investigation into why they fail paves the way for a philosophically plausible account of the relationship between facts and principles.
Date
2012
Type
Article
Copyright/License
Creative Commons Copyright (CC 2.5)
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