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Köp båda 2 för 640 krA brilliant polemic against inequality. Roy Hattersley, The Guardian Barry's pugnacious defence of a robust social democracy deserves to find a wide readership ... for disillusioned social democrats, Why Social Justice Matters stands as a refreshingly staunch and intelligent manifesto. New Statesman Barry's writing is extremely engaging. His arguments are supported by a wide range of examples and illustrations and an impressive breadth of scholarship. Ethics and Social Welfare This book is a powerful argument against the utter inequity of the current political and economic system in the UK and against the way in which a discourse of equal opportunities is used to maintain what Barry describes as the machinery of injustice. In this extraordinarily simple and lucid book, Barry weaves striking threads of supporting evidence, anecdotes, quotations and statistics together to encourage us to insist that another (just) world is not only possible but that an unjust world cannot endure. British Journal of Sociology Barry persuasively argues that differentials in positional goods allow the rich to have better personal health due to higher self-esteem, better access to more fulfilling jobs due to a wealth of social connections, and greater ability to capture the government and use it to secure their own interests. Utilitas
Brian Barry is Lieber Professor of Political Philosophy at Columbia University.
Preface vii Part I Social Justice: The Basics 1 Why We Need a Theory 3 2 The Machinery of Social Injustice 14 3 The Scope of Social Justice 27 Part II Equality of Opportunity 4 Why Equal Opportunity? 37 5 Education 46 6 Health 70 7 The Making of the Black Gulag 95 Part IV The Cult of Personal Responsibility 10 Responsibility versus Equality? 131 11 Rights and Responsibilities 142 12 Irresponsible Societies 154 Part V The Demands of Social Justice 13 Pathologies of Inequality 169 14 Wealth 186 15 Jobs and Incomes 200 16 Can We Afford Social Justice? 215 Part VI The Future of Social Justice 17 The Power of Ideas 233 18 How Change Happens 243 19 Meltdown? 251 20 Justice or Bust 261 Notes 274 Index 311