Acknowledgments Abbreviations Introduction 1. From Aristotle to Adam Smith 1. Two Kinds of Justice 2. The Right of Necessity 3. Property Rights 4. Communal Experiments and Utopian Writings 5. Poor Laws 2. The Eighteenth Century 1. Citizen Equality: Rousseau 2. Changing Our Picture of the Poor: Smith 3. The Equal Worth of Human Beings: Kant 4. To the Vendome Palais de Justice: Babeuf 3. From Babeuf to Rawls 1. Reaction 2. Positivists 3. Marx 4. Utilitarians 5. Rawls 6. After Rawls Epilogue Notes Bibliography Index
Fleischacker provides a fascinating account of the development of our contemporary notion of distributive justice. This is an excellent book that fills a real need. -- Stephen Darwall, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor and author of Welfare and Rational Care This is a succinct, coherent, and wide-ranging history of distributive justice that will be a boon for teachers and students. Written with a light touch, it will provoke discussion and thought, raising the possibility of seeing things differently. A fine contribution. -- Ross Harrison, University of Cambridge and author of Hobbes, Locke, and Confusion's Masterpiece This will be an important book. Its thesis is highly original and interesting, it displays impressive erudition in making its argument, the argument itself is cogently made, and all this is done in a remarkably modest amount of space. -- Daniel Brudney, University of Chicago and author of Marx's Attempt to Leave Philosophy Samuel Fleishacker's engaging and very readable Short History of Distributive Justice should be an essential reference for all social workers who use the concept of social justice...This is a marvelous book which should be read by all social workers. -- Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare
Samuel Fleischacker is Professor of Philosophy, University of Illinois, Chicago.
Fleischacker takes on the conventional history of distributive
justice, more commonly called ‘social justice’ or ‘economic
justice.’ Who first advocated giving material goods to the poor
purely on the basis of need? Some histories attribute this line of
thinking to figures as far back as Plato or Aristotle; others claim
to find it in Rousseau. But Fleischacker convincingly demonstrates
that the true origin of this idea is far more recent than we might
think—and that the first great thinker to advocate it was none
other than that tree-hugging liberal Adam Smith. Although the topic
may seem dauntingly academic, the author has a readable,
conversational style; the work of philosophers as diverse as
Cicero, Hume, and Kant is discussed with energy, style, and
wit.
*American Lawyer*
A Short History of Distributive Justice is marked by extensive
research, careful thought, and clear exposition.
*British Journal for the History of Philosophy*
Engaging and very readable… This is a marvelous book which should
be read by all social workers. By causing social workers to
consider the complex issues the concept of social justice raises,
Fleischacker’s book may facilitate a more nuanced and sophisticated
understanding of what has become a central concept in the
field.
*Journal of Sociology and Social Welfare*
Fleischacker provides a fascinating account of the development of
our contemporary notion of distributive justice. This is an
excellent book that fills a real need.
*Stephen Darwall, University of Michigan, author of Welfare and
Rational Care*
This is a succinct, coherent, and wide-ranging history of
distributive justice that will be a boon for teachers and students.
Written with a light touch, it will provoke discussion and thought,
raising the possibility of seeing things differently. A fine
contribution.
*Ross Harrison, University of Cambridge, author of Hobbes,
Locke, and Confusion’s Masterpiece*
This will be an important book. Its thesis is highly original and
interesting, it displays impressive erudition in making its
argument, the argument itself is cogently made, and all this is
done in a remarkably modest amount of space.
*Daniel Brudney, University of Chicago, author of Marx’s Attempt
to Leave Philosophy*
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