An Introduction to Rawls on Justice
Jon Mandle and Sarah Roberts-Cady
Part I: Public Reason
Introduction to Public Reason
Chapter 1: Public Political Reason: Still Not Wide Enough
David Reidy
Chapter 2: Just Wide Enough: Reidy on Public Reason
James Boettcher
Part II: Ideal and Nonideal Theory
Introduction to Ideal and Nonideal Theory
Chapter 3: The "Focusing Illusion" of Rawlsian Ideal Theory
Colin Farrelly
Chapter 4: The Value of Ideal Theory
Matthew Adams
Part III: The Libertarian Critique
Introduction to the Libertarian Critique
Chapter 5: Rawls's Underestimation of the Importance of Economic
Agency and Economic Rights
Jeppe Von Platz
Chapter 6: Rawls on Economic Liberty and the Choice of "Systems of
Social Co-Operation"
Alan Thomas
Part IV: Luck Egalitarianism
Introduction to Luck Egalitarianism
Chapter 7: Rawls and Luck Egalitarianism
Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen
Chapter 8: The Point of Justice: On the Paradigmatic
Incompatibility between Rawlsian "Justice as Fairness" and Luck
Egalitarianism
Rainer Forst
Part V: The Capability Critique
Introduction to the Capability Critique
Chapter 9: Sen's Capability Critique
Chris Lowry
Chapter 10: Spectres of Democracy: Detouring the Limitations of
Rawls and the Capabilities Approach
Tony Fitzpatrick
Part VI: The Dependency Critique
Introduction to the Dependency Critique
Chapter 11: The Dependency Critique of Rawlsian Equality
Eva Kittay
Chapter 12: A Feminist Liberal Response to the Dependency
Critique
Amy Baehr
Part VII: Rawls and feminism
Introduction to Rawls and Feminism
Chapter 13: The Indeterminacy of Rawls's Principles for Gender
Justice
M. Victoria Costa
Chapter 14: A Feminist Defense of Political Liberalism
Christie Hartley and Lori Watson
Part VIII: Rawls and Nonhuman Animals
Introduction to Rawls and Nonhuman Animals
Chapter 15: Extending Rawlsian Justice to Nonhuman Animals
Sarah Roberts-Cady
Chapter 16: Rawls and Animals: A Defense
Patrick Taylor Smith
Part IX: International Economic Justice
Introduction to International Economic Justice
Chapter 17: Rawls on Global Economic Justice: A Critical
Examination
Rekha Nath
Chapter 18: Rawls's Reasoning about International Economic Justice:
A Defense
Gillian Brock
Part X: International Justice and Toleration
Introduction to International Justice and Toleration
Chapter 19: Right-Wing Populism and Non-Coercive Injustice: On the
Limits of the Law of Peoples
Michael Blake
Chapter 20: Tolerating Decent Societies: A Defense of the Law of
Peoples
Jon Mandle
Jon Mandle is Professor of Philosophy at SUNY Albany. He has
published widely on political philosophy and John Rawls in
particular, including co-editing The Cambridge Rawls Lexicon (with
David Reidy, Cambridge 2015), and the Blackwell Companion to Rawls
(with David Reidy, Blackwell 2014), as well as authoring three
monographs: Rawls a Theory of Justice: An Introduction (Cambridge
2009), Global
Justice (Polity 2006) and What's Left of Liberalism?: An
Interpretation and Defense of Justice as Fairness (Lexington Books
2000).
Sarah Roberts-Cady is a Professor of Philosophy at Fort Lewis
College. Her research on ethics and political philosophy has been
featured in Journal of Social Philosophy, International Journal of
Applied Philosophy, Philosophy Today, and Politics and the Life
Sciences.
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