H/t to Georgia Hollister Isman
Sunday, November 30, 2014
DPI-235 Lecture 25: Exploitation
Readings:
Ruth Sample.
“Exploitation and Globalization: Is Globalization Fundamentally Exploitative?”
Chapter 5 of Exploitation: What It Is and
Why It’s Wrong (Rowman and Littlefield 2003). Group 3
Alan Wertheimer
“The Exploitation of Student Athletes” and “Unfair Transactions,” Chapters 3
and 7 of Exploitation (Princeton University Press,
1999). Group 2
Brian Bix.
“Contracts,” Chapter 10 of The Ethics of
Consent: Theory and Practice, edited by Franklin Miller and Alan Wertheimer
(Oxford University Press, 2009). Group 1
DPI-235 Lecture 24: Commodification
Readings:
Debra Satz.
“Noxious Markets” and “Child Labor: A Normative Perspective,” Chapters 4 and 7
of Why Some Things Should Not Be For
Sale: The Moral Limits of the Market (Oxford University Press, 2010). Group 2
Margaret Jane
Radin. ‘Human Flourishing and Market Rhetoric,” “Incomplete Commodification,”
and “Conceptual Recapitulation,” Chapter 6-8 of Contested Commodities (Harvard University Press 2001). Group 1
Regina Austin.
“Kwanzaa and the Commodification of Black Culture,” in Rethinking Commodification: Case and Readings in Law and Culture,
edited by Martha Ertman and Joan Williams (August 2005). Group 3
DPI-235 Lecture 23: Economic Reparations
Readings:
Ta-Nehisi Coates.
“The Case for Reparations,” in The
Atlantic (May, 2014) Group 3
Debra Satz.
“Countering the Wrongs of the Past: The Role of Reparations,” Chapter 8 of Reparations: Interdisciplinary Inquiries,
edited by Jon Miller and Rahul Kumar (Oxford University Press 2007). Group 2
Kok-Chor Tan.
“Colonialism, Reparations, and Global Justice,” Chapter 12 of Reparations: Interdisciplinary Inquiries,
edited by Jon Miller and Rahul Kumar (Oxford University Press 2007). Group 1
DPI-235 Lecture 22: Ethics of Regulation
Readings:
Loren Lomansky.
“Liberty After Lehman Brothers,” in Liberalism
and Capitalism: Volume 28, Part 2,
Social Philosophy and Policy (Cambridge University Press 2011). Groups 1-2
Jonathan Wolff.
“Market Failure, Common Interests, and the Titanic Puzzle,” Chapter 12 of Egalitarianism: New Essays on the Nature and
Value of Equality (Oxford University Press, 2007). Group 3
DPI-235 Lecture 21: Health and Economic Inequality
Readings:
Norman Daniels,
Bruce Kennedy and Ichiro Kawachi. “Justice is Good For Our Health,” Chapter 1
of Is Inequality Bad For Our Health,
edited by Norman Daniels, Bruce Kennedy and Ichiro Kawachi (Beacon Press 2001).
Optional
Normal Daniels.
“Capabilities, Opportunity, and Health,” Chapter 6 of Measuring Justice: Primary Goods and Capabilities, edited by Harry
Brighouse and Ingrid Robeyns (Cambridge University Press 2010). Group 1
Daniel Wikler.
“Personal and Social Responsibility for Health,” Chapter 6 of Public Health, Ethics and Equity, edited
by Sudhir Anand, Fabienne Peter and Amartya Sen (Oxford University Press 2006).
Group 2
Daniel Hausman.
“A Lockean Argument for Universal Access to Health Care,” in Liberalism and Capitalism: Volume 28, Part 2, Social Philosophy and
Policy (Cambridge University Press 2011). Group 3
DPI-235 Lecture 20: Redistributive and Socialist Plans
Readings:
Samuel Bowles and
Herbert Gintis. “Efficient Redistribution: New Rules for Markets, States and
Communities,” Chapter 1 of Recasting
Egalitarianism: New Rules for Communities, States and Markets, edited by
Samuel Bowles, Harry Brighouse and Herbet Gintis. (Verso 1999). Groups 2-3
John Roemer. “A
Future for Socialism,” Chapter 1 of Equal
Shares: Making Market Socialism Work, edited by John Roemer and Erik Olin
Wright (Verson 1996). Group 1
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)