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Social justice

Social justice is justice in terms of the distribution of wealth, opportunities, and privileges within a society.[1] In Western and Asian cultures, the concept of social justice has often referred to the process of ensuring that individuals fulfill their societal roles and receive their due from society.[2][3][4] In the current movements for social justice, the emphasis has been on the breaking of barriers for social mobility, the creation of safety nets, and economic justice.[5][6][7][8][9][excessive citations] Social justice assigns rights and duties in the institutions of society, which enables people to receive the basic benefits and burdens of cooperation. The relevant institutions often include taxation, social insurance, public health, public school, public services, labor law and regulation of markets, to ensure distribution of wealth, and equal opportunity.[10]

Interpretations that relate justice to a reciprocal relationship to society are mediated by differences in cultural traditions, some of which emphasize the individual responsibility toward society and others the equilibrium between access to power and its responsible use.[11] Hence, social justice is invoked today while reinterpreting historical figures such as Bartolomé de las Casas, in philosophical debates about differences among human beings, in efforts for gender, ethnic, and social equality, for advocating justice for migrants, prisoners, the environment, and the physically and developmentally disabled.[12][13][14]

While concepts of social justice can be found in classical and Christian philosophical sources, from Plato and Aristotle to Augustine of Hippo and Thomas Aquinas, the term social justice finds its earliest uses in the late 18th century, albeit with unclear theoretical or practical meanings.[15][16][17] The use of the term was early on subject to accusations of redundancy and of rhetorical flourish, perhaps but not necessarily related to amplifying one view of distributive justice.[18] In the coining and definition of the term in the natural law social scientific treatise of Luigi Taparelli, in the early 1840s,[19] Taparelli established the natural law principle that corresponded to the evangelical principle of brotherly love—i.e. social justice reflects the duty one has to one’s other self in the interdependent abstract unity of the human person in society.[20] After the Revolutions of 1848 the term was popularized generically through the writings of Antonio Rosmini-Serbati.[21][22]

In the late industrial revolution, Progressive Era American legal scholars began to use the term more, particularly Louis Brandeis and Roscoe Pound. From the early 20th century it was also embedded in international law and institutions; the preamble to establish the International Labour Organization recalled that "universal and lasting peace can be established only if it is based upon social justice." In the later 20th century, social justice was made central to the philosophy of the social contract, primarily by John Rawls in A Theory of Justice (1971). In 1993, the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action treats social justice as a purpose of human rights education.[23][24]

History

 
An artist's rendering of what Plato might have looked like. From Raphael's early 16th century painting "Scuola di Atene".

The different concepts of justice, as discussed in ancient Western philosophy, were typically centered upon the community.

 
Roman copy in marble of a Greek bronze bust of Aristotle by Lysippos, c. 330 BC. The alabaster mantle is modern.
  • Plato wrote in The Republic that it would be an ideal state that "every member of the community must be assigned to the class for which he finds himself best fitted."[25] In an article for J.N.V University, author D.R. Bhandari says, "Justice is, for Plato, at once a part of human virtue and the bond, which joins man together in society. It is the identical quality that makes good and social. Justice is an order and duty of the parts of the soul, it is to the soul as health is to the body. Plato says that justice is not mere strength, but it is a harmonious strength. Justice is not the right of the stronger but the effective harmony of the whole. All moral conceptions revolve about the good of the whole-individual as well as social".[26]
  • Plato believed rights existed only between free people, and the law should take "account in the first instance of relations of inequality in which individuals are treated in proportion to their worth and only secondarily of relations of equality." Reflecting this time when slavery and subjugation of women was typical, ancient views of justice tended to reflect the rigid class systems that still prevailed. On the other hand, for the privileged groups, strong concepts of fairness and the community existed. Distributive justice was said by Aristotle to require that people were distributed goods and assets according to their merit.[27]
 
Bust of Socrates
  • Socrates (through Plato's dialogue Crito) is credited with developing the idea of a social contract, whereby people ought to follow the rules of a society, and accept its burdens because they have accepted its benefits.[28] During the Middle Ages, religious scholars particularly, such as Thomas Aquinas continued discussion of justice in various ways, but ultimately connected being a good citizen to the purpose of serving God.

After the Renaissance and Reformation, the modern concept of social justice, as developing human potential, began to emerge through the work of a series of authors. Baruch Spinoza in On the Improvement of the Understanding (1677) contended that the one true aim of life should be to acquire "a human character much more stable than [one's] own", and to achieve this "pitch of perfection... The chief good is that he should arrive, together with other individuals if possible, at the possession of the aforesaid character."[29] During the enlightenment and responding to the French and American Revolutions, Thomas Paine similarly wrote in The Rights of Man (1792) society should give "genius a fair and universal chance" and so "the construction of government ought to be such as to bring forward... all that extent of capacity which never fails to appear in revolutions."[30]

 
Social justice has been traditionally credited to be coined by Jesuit priest Luigi Taparelli in the 1840s, but the expression is older

Although there is no certainty about the first use of the term "social justice", early sources can be found in Europe in the 18th century.[31] Some references to the use of the expression are in articles of journals aligned with the spirit of the Enlightenment, in which social justice is described as an obligation of the monarch;[32][33] also the term is present in books written by Catholic Italian theologians, notably members of the Society of Jesus.[34] Thus, according to this sources and the context, social justice was another term for "the justice of society", the justice that rules the relations among individuals in society, without any mention to socio-economic equity or human dignity.[31]

The usage of the term started to become more frequent by Catholic thinkers from the 1840s, beginning with the Jesuit Luigi Taparelli in Civiltà Cattolica, and based on the work of St. Thomas Aquinas. Taparelli argued that rival capitalist and socialist theories, based on subjective Cartesian thinking, undermined the unity of society present in Thomistic metaphysics as neither were sufficiently concerned with ethics.[18] Writing in 1861, the influential British philosopher and economist, John Stuart Mill stated in Utilitarianism his view that "Society should treat all equally well who have deserved equally well of it, that is, who have deserved equally well absolutely. This is the highest abstract standard of social and distributive justice; towards which all institutions, and the efforts of all virtuous citizens, should be made in the utmost degree to converge."[35]

In the later 19th and early 20th century, social justice became an important theme in American political and legal philosophy, particularly in the work of John Dewey, Roscoe Pound and Louis Brandeis. One of the prime concerns was the Lochner era decisions of the US Supreme Court to strike down legislation passed by state governments and the Federal government for social and economic improvement, such as the eight-hour day or the right to join a trade union. After the First World War, the founding document of the International Labour Organization took up the same terminology in its preamble, stating that "peace can be established only if it is based on social justice". From this point, the discussion of social justice entered into mainstream legal and academic discourse.

In 1931, the Pope Pius XI explicitly referred to the expression, along with the concept of subsidiarity, for the first time in Catholic social teaching in the encyclical Quadragesimo anno. Then again in Divini Redemptoris, the church pointed out that the realization of social justice relied on the promotion of the dignity of human person.[36] During the 1930s, the term was widely associated with pro-Nazi and antisemitic groups, such as the Christian Front.[37] Social Justice was the slogan of Charles Coughlin, and the name of his newspaper. Because of the documented influence of Divini Redemptoris in its drafters,[38] the Constitution of Ireland was the first one to establish the term as a principle of the economy in the State, and then other countries around the world did the same throughout the 20th century, even in socialist regimes such as the Cuban Constitution in 1976.[31]

In the late 20th century, several liberal and conservative thinkers, notably Friedrich Hayek rejected the concept by stating that it did not mean anything, or meant too many things.[39] However the concept remained highly influential, particularly with its promotion by philosophers such as John Rawls. Even though the meaning of social justice varies, at least three common elements can be identified in the contemporary theories about it: a duty of the State to distribute certain vital means (such as economic, social, and cultural rights), the protection of human dignity, and affirmative actions to promote equal opportunities for everybody.[31]

Contemporary theory

Philosophical perspectives

Cosmic values

Hunter Lewis' work promoting natural healthcare and sustainable economies advocates for conservation as a key premise in social justice. His manifesto on sustainability ties the continued thriving of human life to real conditions, the environment supporting that life, and associates injustice with the detrimental effects of unintended consequences of human actions. Quoting classical Greek thinkers like Epicurus on the good of pursuing happiness, Hunter also cites ornithologist, naturalist, and philosopher Alexander Skutch in his book Moral Foundations:

The common feature which unites the activities most consistently forbidden by the moral codes of civilized peoples is that by their very nature they cannot be both habitual and enduring, because they tend to destroy the conditions which make them possible.[40]

Pope Benedict XVI cites Teilhard de Chardin in a vision of the cosmos as a 'living host'[41] embracing an understanding of ecology that includes humanity's relationship to others, that pollution affects not just the natural world but interpersonal relations as well. Cosmic harmony, justice and peace are closely interrelated:

If you want to cultivate peace, protect creation.[42]

In The Quest for Cosmic Justice, Thomas Sowell writes that seeking utopia, while admirable, may have disastrous effects if done without strong consideration of the economic underpinnings that support contemporary society.[43]

John Rawls

Political philosopher John Rawls draws on the utilitarian insights of Bentham and Mill, the social contract ideas of John Locke, and the categorical imperative ideas of Kant. His first statement of principle was made in A Theory of Justice where he proposed that, "Each person possesses an inviolability founded on justice that even the welfare of society as a whole cannot override. For this reason justice denies that the loss of freedom for some is made right by a greater good shared by others."[44] A deontological proposition that echoes Kant in framing the moral good of justice in absolutist terms. His views are definitively restated in Political Liberalism where society is seen "as a fair system of co-operation over time, from one generation to the next".[45]

All societies have a basic structure of social, economic, and political institutions, both formal and informal. In testing how well these elements fit and work together, Rawls based a key test of legitimacy on the theories of social contract. To determine whether any particular system of collectively enforced social arrangements is legitimate, he argued that one must look for agreement by the people who are subject to it, but not necessarily to an objective notion of justice based on coherent ideological grounding. Obviously, not every citizen can be asked to participate in a poll to determine his or her consent to every proposal in which some degree of coercion is involved, so one has to assume that all citizens are reasonable. Rawls constructed an argument for a two-stage process to determine a citizen's hypothetical agreement:

  • The citizen agrees to be represented by X for certain purposes, and, to that extent, X holds these powers as a trustee for the citizen.
  • X agrees that enforcement in a particular social context is legitimate. The citizen, therefore, is bound by this decision because it is the function of the trustee to represent the citizen in this way.

This applies to one person who represents a small group (e.g., the organiser of a social event setting a dress code) as equally as it does to national governments, which are ultimate trustees, holding representative powers for the benefit of all citizens within their territorial boundaries. Governments that fail to provide for welfare of their citizens according to the principles of justice are not legitimate. To emphasise the general principle that justice should rise from the people and not be dictated by the law-making powers of governments, Rawls asserted that, "There is ... a general presumption against imposing legal and other restrictions on conduct without sufficient reason. But this presumption creates no special priority for any particular liberty."[46] This is support for an unranked set of liberties that reasonable citizens in all states should respect and uphold — to some extent, the list proposed by Rawls matches the normative human rights that have international recognition and direct enforcement in some nation states where the citizens need encouragement to act in a way that fixes a greater degree of equality of outcome. According to Rawls, the basic liberties that every good society should guarantee are:

  • Freedom of thought;
  • Liberty of conscience as it affects social relationships on the grounds of religion, philosophy, and morality;
  • Political liberties (e.g., representative democratic institutions, freedom of speech and the press, and freedom of assembly);
  • Freedom of association;
  • Freedoms necessary for the liberty and integrity of the person (namely: freedom from slavery, freedom of movement and a reasonable degree of freedom to choose one's occupation); and
  • Rights and liberties covered by the rule of law.

Thomas Pogge

Thomas Pogge's arguments pertain to a standard of social justice that creates human rights deficits. He assigns responsibility to those who actively cooperate in designing or imposing the social institution, that the order is foreseeable as harming the global poor and is reasonably avoidable. Pogge argues that social institutions have a negative duty to not harm the poor.[47][48]

Pogge speaks of "institutional cosmopolitanism" and assigns responsibility to institutional schemes[49] for deficits of human rights. An example given is slavery and third parties. A third party should not recognize or enforce slavery. The institutional order should be held responsible only for deprivations of human rights that it establishes or authorizes. The current institutional design, he says, systematically harms developing economies by enabling corporate tax evasion,[50] illicit financial flows, corruption, trafficking of people and weapons. Joshua Cohen disputes his claims based on the fact that some poor countries have done well with the current institutional design.[51] Elizabeth Kahn argues that some of these responsibilities[vague] should apply globally.[52]

United Nations

The United Nations calls social justice "an underlying principle for peaceful and prosperous coexistence within and among nations.[53]

The United Nations' 2006 document Social Justice in an Open World: The Role of the United Nations, states that "Social justice may be broadly understood as the fair and compassionate distribution of the fruits of economic growth ..."[54]: 16 

The term "social justice" was seen by the U.N. "as a substitute for the protection of human rights [and] first appeared in United Nations texts during the second half of the 1960s. At the initiative of the Soviet Union, and with the support of developing countries, the term was used in the Declaration on Social Progress and Development, adopted in 1969."[54]: 52 

The same document reports, "From the comprehensive global perspective shaped by the United Nations Charter and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, neglect of the pursuit of social justice in all its dimensions translates into de facto acceptance of a future marred by violence, repression and chaos."[54]: 6  The report concludes, "Social justice is not possible without strong and coherent redistributive policies conceived and implemented by public agencies."[54]: 16 

The same UN document offers a concise history: "[T]he notion of social justice is relatively new. None of history’s great philosophers—not Plato or Aristotle, or Confucius or Averroes, or even Rousseau or Kant—saw the need to consider justice or the redress of injustices from a social perspective. The concept first surfaced in Western thought and political language in the wake of the industrial revolution and the parallel development of the socialist doctrine. It emerged as an expression of protest against what was perceived as the capitalist exploitation of labor and as a focal point for the development of measures to improve the human condition. It was born as a revolutionary slogan embodying the ideals of progress and fraternity. Following the revolutions that shook Europe in the mid-1800s, social justice became a rallying cry for progressive thinkers and political activists.... By the mid-twentieth century, the concept of social justice had become central to the ideologies and programs of virtually all the leftist and centrist political parties around the world ..."[54]: 11–12 

Another key area of human rights and social justice is the United Nations's defense of children's rights worldwide. In 1989, the Convention on the Rights of the Child was adopted and available for signature, ratification and accession by General Assembly resolution 44/25.[55] According to OHCHR, this convention entered into force on 2 September 1990. This convention upholds that all states have the obligation to "protect the child from all forms of physical or mental violence, injury or abuse, neglect or negligent treatment, maltreatment or exploitation, including sexual abuse."[55]

Religious perspectives

Abrahamic religions

Christianity

Evangelicalism

Time magazine noted that younger Evangelicals also increasingly engage in social justice.[56] John Stott traced the call for social justice back to the cross, "The cross is a revelation of God's justice as well as of his love. That is why the community of the cross should concern itself with social justice as well as with loving philanthropy."[57]

Methodism

From its founding, Methodism was a Christian social justice movement. Under John Wesley's direction, Methodists became leaders in many social justice issues of the day, including the prison reform and abolition movements. Wesley himself was among the first to preach for slaves rights, attracting significant opposition.[58][59][60]

Today, social justice plays a major role in the United Methodist Church and the Free Methodist Church.[61] The Book of Discipline of the United Methodist Church says, "We hold governments responsible for the protection of the rights of the people to free and fair elections and to the freedoms of speech, religion, assembly, communications media, and petition for redress of grievances without fear of reprisal; to the right to privacy; and to the guarantee of the rights to adequate food, clothing, shelter, education, and health care."[62] The United Methodist Church also teaches population control as part of its doctrine.[63]

Catholicism

Catholic social teaching consists of those aspects of Roman Catholic doctrine which relate to matters dealing with the respect of the individual human life. A distinctive feature of Catholic social doctrine is its concern for the poorest and most vulnerable members of society. Two of the seven key areas[64] of "Catholic social teaching" are pertinent to social justice:

  • Life and dignity of the human person: The foundational principle of all Catholic social teaching is the sanctity of all human life and the inherent dignity of every human person, from conception to natural death. Human life must be valued above all material possessions.
  • Preferential option for the poor and vulnerable: Catholics believe Jesus taught that on the Day of Judgement God will ask what each person did to help the poor and needy: "Amen, I say to you, whatever you did for one of these least brothers of mine, you did for me."[65] The Catholic Church believes that through words, prayers and deeds one must show solidarity with, and compassion for, the poor. The moral test of any society is "how it treats its most vulnerable members. The poor have the most urgent moral claim on the conscience of the nation. People are called to look at public policy decisions in terms of how they affect the poor."[66]

Modern Catholic social teaching is often thought to have begun with the encyclicals of Pope Leo XIII.[18]

  • Pope Leo XIII, who studied under Taparelli, published in 1891 the encyclical Rerum novarum (On the Condition of the Working Classes; lit. "On new things"), rejecting both socialism and capitalism, while defending labor unions and private property. He stated that society should be based on cooperation and not class conflict and competition. In this document, Leo set out the Catholic Church's response to the social instability and labor conflict that had arisen in the wake of industrialization and had led to the rise of socialism. The Pope advocated that the role of the state was to promote social justice through the protection of rights, while the church must speak out on social issues to teach correct social principles and ensure class harmony.
  • The encyclical Quadragesimo anno (On Reconstruction of the Social Order, literally "in the fortieth year") of 1931 by Pope Pius XI, encourages a living wage,[67] subsidiarity, and advocates that social justice is a personal virtue as well as an attribute of the social order, saying that society can be just only if individuals and institutions are just.
  • Pope John Paul II added much to the corpus of the Catholic social teaching, penning three encyclicals which focus on issues such as economics, politics, geo-political situations, ownership of the means of production, private property and the "social mortgage", and private property. The encyclicals Laborem exercens, Sollicitudo rei socialis, and Centesimus annus are just a small portion of his overall contribution to Catholic social justice. Pope John Paul II was a strong advocate of justice and human rights, and spoke forcefully for the poor. He addresses issues such as the problems that technology can present should it be misused, and admits a fear that the "progress" of the world is not true progress at all, if it should denigrate the value of the human person. He argued in Centesimus annus that private property, markets, and honest labor were the keys to alleviating the miseries of the poor and to enabling a life that can express the fullness of the human person.
  • Pope Benedict XVI's encyclical Deus caritas est ("God is Love") of 2006 claims that justice is the defining concern of the state and the central concern of politics, and not of the church, which has charity as its central social concern. It said that the laity has the specific responsibility of pursuing social justice in civil society and that the church's active role in social justice should be to inform the debate, using reason and natural law, and also by providing moral and spiritual formation for those involved in politics.
  • The official Catholic doctrine on social justice can be found in the book Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church, published in 2004 and updated in 2006, by the Pontifical Council Iustitia et Pax.

The Catechism of the Catholic Church (§§ 1928–1948) contains more detail of the church's view of social justice.[68]

Islam

In Muslim history, Islamic governance has often been associated with social justice.[additional citation(s) needed] Establishment of social justice was one of the motivating factors of the Abbasid revolt against the Umayyads.[69] The Shi'a believe that the return of the Mahdi will herald in "the messianic age of justice" and the Mahdi along with the Isa (Jesus) will end plunder, torture, oppression and discrimination.[70]

For the Muslim Brotherhood the implementation of social justice would require the rejection of consumerism and communism. The Brotherhood strongly affirmed the right to private property as well as differences in personal wealth due to factors such as hard work. However, the Brotherhood held Muslims had an obligation to assist those Muslims in need. It held that zakat (alms-giving) was not voluntary charity, but rather the poor had the right to assistance from the more fortunate.[71] Most Islamic governments therefore enforce the zakat through taxes.

Judaism

In To Heal a Fractured World: The Ethics of Responsibility, Rabbi Jonathan Sacks states that social justice has a central place in Judaism. One of Judaism's most distinctive and challenging ideas is its ethics of responsibility reflected in the concepts of simcha ("gladness" or "joy"), tzedakah ("the religious obligation to perform charity and philanthropic acts"), chesed ("deeds of kindness"), and tikkun olam ("repairing the world").[72]

Eastern religions

Hinduism

The present-day Jāti hierarchy is undergoing changes for a variety of reasons including 'social justice', which is a politically popular stance in democratic India. Institutionalized affirmative action has promoted this. The disparity and wide inequalities in social behaviour of the jātis – exclusive, endogamous communities centred on traditional occupations – has led to various reform movements in Hinduism. While legally outlawed, the caste system remains strong in practice.[73]

Traditional Chinese religion

The Chinese concept of Tian Ming has occasionally been perceived[by whom?] as an expression of social justice.[74] Through it, the deposition of unfair rulers is justified in that civic dissatisfaction and economical disasters is perceived as Heaven withdrawing its favor from the Emperor. A successful rebellion is considered definite proof that the Emperor is unfit to rule.

Social justice movements

Social justice is also a concept that is used to describe the movement towards a socially just world, e.g., the Global Justice Movement. In this context, social justice is based on the concepts of human rights and equality, and can be defined as "the way in which human rights are manifested in the everyday lives of people at every level of society".[75]

Several movements are working to achieve social justice in society. These movements are working toward the realization of a world where all members of a society, regardless of background or procedural justice, have basic human rights and equal access to the benefits of their society.[76]

Liberation theology

Liberation theology[77] is a movement in Christian theology which conveys the teachings of Jesus Christ in terms of a liberation from unjust economic, political, or social conditions. It has been described by proponents as "an interpretation of Christian faith through the poor's suffering, their struggle and hope, and a critique of society and the Catholic faith and Christianity through the eyes of the poor",[78] and by detractors as Christianity perverted by Marxism and Communism.[79]

Although liberation theology has grown into an international and inter-denominational movement, it began as a movement within the Catholic Church in Latin America in the 1950s–1960s. It arose principally as a moral reaction to the poverty caused by social injustice in that region.[80] It achieved prominence in the 1970s and 1980s. The term was coined by the Peruvian priest Gustavo Gutiérrez, who wrote one of the movement's most famous books, A Theology of Liberation (1971). According to Sarah Kleeb, "Marx would surely take issue," she writes, "with the appropriation of his works in a religious context...there is no way to reconcile Marx's views of religion with those of Gutierrez, they are simply incompatible. Despite this, in terms of their understanding of the necessity of a just and righteous world, and the nearly inevitable obstructions along such a path, the two have much in common; and, particularly in the first edition of [A Theology of Liberation], the use of Marxian theory is quite evident."[81]

Other noted exponents are Leonardo Boff of Brazil, Carlos Mugica of Argentina, Jon Sobrino of El Salvador, and Juan Luis Segundo of Uruguay.[82][83]

Health care

Social justice has more recently made its way into the field of bioethics. Discussion involves topics such as affordable access to health care, especially for low-income households and families. The discussion also raises questions such as whether society should bear healthcare costs for low-income families, and whether the global marketplace is the best way to distribute healthcare. Ruth Faden of the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics and Madison Powers of Georgetown University focus their analysis of social justice on which inequalities matter the most. They develop a social justice theory that answers some of these questions in concrete settings.

Social injustices occur when there is a preventable difference in health states among a population of people. These social injustices take the form of health inequities when negative health states such as malnourishment, and infectious diseases are more prevalent in impoverished nations.[84] These negative health states can often be prevented by providing social and economic structures such as primary healthcare which ensures the general population has equal access to health care services regardless of income level, gender, education or any other stratifying factors. Integrating social justice with health inherently reflects the social determinants of health model without discounting the role of the bio-medical model.[85]

Health inequalities

The sources of health inequalities are rooted in injustices associated with racism, sex discrimination, and social class. Richard Hofrichter and his colleagues examine the political implications of various perspectives used to explain health inequities and explore alternative strategies for eliminating them.[86]

Human rights education

The Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action affirm that "Human rights education should include peace, democracy, development and social justice, as set forth in international and regional human rights instruments, to achieve common understanding and awareness to strengthen universal commitment to human rights."[87]

Ecology and environment

Social justice principles are embedded in the larger environmental movement. The third principle of the Earth Charter is social and economic justice, which is described as seeking to eradicate poverty as an ethical, social, and environmental imperative, ensure that economic activities and institutions at all levels promote human development in an equitable and sustainable manner, affirm gender equality and equity as prerequisites to sustainable development and ensure universal access to education, health care, and economic opportunity, and uphold the right of all, without discrimination, to a natural and social environment supportive of human dignity, bodily health, and spiritual well-being, with special attention to the rights of indigenous peoples and minorities.

The climate justice and environmental justice movements also incorporate social justice principles, ideas, and practices. Climate justice and environmental justice, as movements within the larger ecological and environmental movement, each incorporate social justice in a particular way. Climate justice includes concern for social justice pertaining to greenhouse gas emissions,[88] climate-induced environmental displacement,[89] as well as climate change mitigation and adaptation. Environmental justice includes concern for social justice pertaining to either environmental benefits[90] or environmental pollution[91] based on their equitable distribution across communities of color, communities of various socio and economic stratification, or any other barriers to justice.

Criticism

Michael Novak argues that social justice has seldom been adequately defined, arguing:

[W]hole books and treatises have been written about social justice without ever defining it. It is allowed to float in the air as if everyone will recognize an instance of it when it appears. This vagueness seems indispensable. The minute one begins to define social justice, one runs into embarrassing intellectual difficulties. It becomes, most often, a term of art whose operational meaning is, "We need a law against that." In other words, it becomes an instrument of ideological intimidation, for the purpose of gaining the power of legal coercion.[92]

Friedrich Hayek of the Austrian School of economics rejected the very idea of social justice as meaningless, self-contradictory, and ideological, believing that to realize any degree of social justice is unfeasible, and that the attempt to do so must destroy all liberty:

There can be no test by which we can discover what is 'socially unjust' because there is no subject by which such an injustice can be committed, and there are no rules of individual conduct the observance of which in the market order would secure to the individuals and groups the position which as such (as distinguished from the procedure by which it is determined) would appear just to us. [Social justice] does not belong to the category of error but to that of nonsense, like the term 'a moral stone'.[93]

Hayek argued that proponents of social justice often present it as a moral virtue but most of their descriptions pertain to impersonal states of affairs (e.g. income inequality, poverty), which are cited as "social injustice." Hayek argued that social justice is either a virtue or it is not. If it is, it can only be ascribed to the actions of individuals. However, most who use the term ascribe it to social systems, so "social justice" in fact describes a regulative principle of order; they are interested not in virtue but power.[92] For Hayek, this notion of social justices presupposes that people are guided by specific external directions rather than internal, personal rules of just conduct. It further presupposes that one can never be held accountable for ones own behaviour, as this would be "blaming the victim." According to Hayek, the function of social justice is to blame someone else, often attributed to "the system" or those who are supposed, mythically, to control it. Thus it is based on the appealing idea of "you suffer; your suffering is caused by powerful others; these oppressors must be destroyed."[92]

Ben O'Neill of the University of New South Wales and the Mises Institute argues:

[For advocates of "social justice"] the notion of "rights" is a mere term of entitlement, indicative of a claim for any possible desirable good, no matter how important or trivial, abstract or tangible, recent or ancient. It is merely an assertion of desire, and a declaration of intention to use the language of rights to acquire said desire. In fact, since the program of social justice inevitably involves claims for government provision of goods, paid for through the efforts of others, the term actually refers to an intention to use force to acquire one's desires. Not to earn desirable goods by rational thought and action, production and voluntary exchange, but to go in there and forcibly take goods from those who can supply them![94]

See also

References

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  2. ^ Aristotle, The Politics (ca 350 BC)
  3. ^ Clark, Mary T. (2015). "Augustine on Justice," a Chapter in Augustine and Social Justice. Lexington Books. pp. 3–10. ISBN 978-1-4985-0918-3.
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Further reading

Articles

  • C Pérez-Garzón, 'What is social justice? A new history of its meaning in the transnational legal discourse' (2019) 43 Revista Derecho del Estado 67-106, originally in Spanish: '¿Qué es justicia social? Una nueva historia de su significado en el discurso jurídico transnacional'
  • LD Brandeis, 'The Living Law' (1915–1916) 10 Illinois Law Review 461
  • A Etzioni, 'The Fair Society, Uniting America: Restoring the Vital Center to American Democracy 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine' in N Garfinkle and D Yankelovich (eds) (Yale University Press 2005) pp. 211–223
  • Otto von Gierke, The Social Role of Private Law (2016) translated and introduced by E McGaughey, originally in German Die soziale Aufgabe des Privatrechts
  • M Novak, 'Defining Social Justice' (2000) First Things
  • B O'Neill, 'The Injustice of Social Justice' (Mises Institute)
  • R Pound, 'Social Justice and Legal Justice' (1912) 75 Central Law Journal 455
  • M Powers and R Faden, 'Inequalities in health, inequalities in health care: four generations of discussion about justice and cost-effectiveness analysis' (2000) 10(2) Kennedy Inst Ethics Journal 109–127
  • M Powers and R Faden, 'Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care: An Ethical Analysis of When and How They Matter,' in Unequal Treatment: Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care (National Academy of Sciences, Institute of Medicine, 2002) 722–38
  • United Nations, Department of Economic and Social Affairs, 'Social Justice in an Open World: The Role of the United Nations' (2006) ST/ESA/305

Books

  • AB Atkinson, Social Justice and Public Policy (1982) previews
  • Gad Barzilai, Communities and Law: Politics and Cultures of Legal Identities (University of Michigan Press) analysis of justice for non-ruling communities
  • TN Carver, Essays in Social Justice (1915) Chapter links.
  • C Quigley The Evolution of Civilizations: An Introduction to Historical Analysis (1961) 2nd edition 1979
  • P Corning, The Fair Society: The Science of Human Nature and the Pursuit of Social Justice (Chicago UP 2011)
  • WL Droel What is Social Justice (ACTA Publications 2011)
  • R Faden and M Powers, Social Justice: The Moral Foundations of Public Health and Health Policy OUP 2006 ISBN 978-0-19-518926-1
  • J Franklin (ed), Life to the Full: Rights and Social Justice in Australia (Connor Court 2007)
  • LC Frederking (2013) Reconstructing Social Justice (Routledge) ISBN 978-1-138-19402-1
  • FA Hayek, Law, Legislation and Liberty (1973) vol II, ch 3
  • G Kitching, Seeking Social Justice through Globalization: Escaping a Nationalist Perspective (2003)
  • JS Mill, Utilitarianism (1863)
  • T Massaro, S.J. Living Justice: Catholic Social Teaching in Action (Rowman & Littlefield 2012)
  • John Rawls, A Theory of Justice (Harvard University Press 1971)
  • John Rawls, Political Liberalism (Columbia University Press 1993)
  • C Philomena, B Hoose and G Mannion (eds), Social Justice: Theological and Practical Explorations (2007)
  • A Swift, Political Philosophy (3rd edn 2013) ch 1
  • Michael J. Thompson, The Limits of Liberalism: A Republican Theory of Social Justice (International Journal of Ethics: vol. 7, no. 3 (2011)

social, justice, early, 20th, century, periodical, social, justice, periodical, academic, journal, established, 1974, social, justice, journal, justice, terms, distribution, wealth, opportunities, privileges, within, society, western, asian, cultures, concept,. For the early 20th century periodical see Social Justice periodical For the academic journal established in 1974 see Social Justice journal Social justice is justice in terms of the distribution of wealth opportunities and privileges within a society 1 In Western and Asian cultures the concept of social justice has often referred to the process of ensuring that individuals fulfill their societal roles and receive their due from society 2 3 4 In the current movements for social justice the emphasis has been on the breaking of barriers for social mobility the creation of safety nets and economic justice 5 6 7 8 9 excessive citations Social justice assigns rights and duties in the institutions of society which enables people to receive the basic benefits and burdens of cooperation The relevant institutions often include taxation social insurance public health public school public services labor law and regulation of markets to ensure distribution of wealth and equal opportunity 10 Interpretations that relate justice to a reciprocal relationship to society are mediated by differences in cultural traditions some of which emphasize the individual responsibility toward society and others the equilibrium between access to power and its responsible use 11 Hence social justice is invoked today while reinterpreting historical figures such as Bartolome de las Casas in philosophical debates about differences among human beings in efforts for gender ethnic and social equality for advocating justice for migrants prisoners the environment and the physically and developmentally disabled 12 13 14 While concepts of social justice can be found in classical and Christian philosophical sources from Plato and Aristotle to Augustine of Hippo and Thomas Aquinas the term social justice finds its earliest uses in the late 18th century albeit with unclear theoretical or practical meanings 15 16 17 The use of the term was early on subject to accusations of redundancy and of rhetorical flourish perhaps but not necessarily related to amplifying one view of distributive justice 18 In the coining and definition of the term in the natural law social scientific treatise of Luigi Taparelli in the early 1840s 19 Taparelli established the natural law principle that corresponded to the evangelical principle of brotherly love i e social justice reflects the duty one has to one s other self in the interdependent abstract unity of the human person in society 20 After the Revolutions of 1848 the term was popularized generically through the writings of Antonio Rosmini Serbati 21 22 In the late industrial revolution Progressive Era American legal scholars began to use the term more particularly Louis Brandeis and Roscoe Pound From the early 20th century it was also embedded in international law and institutions the preamble to establish the International Labour Organization recalled that universal and lasting peace can be established only if it is based upon social justice In the later 20th century social justice was made central to the philosophy of the social contract primarily by John Rawls in A Theory of Justice 1971 In 1993 the Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action treats social justice as a purpose of human rights education 23 24 Contents 1 History 2 Contemporary theory 2 1 Philosophical perspectives 2 1 1 Cosmic values 2 1 2 John Rawls 2 1 3 Thomas Pogge 2 1 4 United Nations 3 Religious perspectives 3 1 Abrahamic religions 3 1 1 Christianity 3 1 1 1 Evangelicalism 3 1 1 1 1 Methodism 3 1 1 2 Catholicism 3 1 2 Islam 3 1 3 Judaism 3 2 Eastern religions 3 2 1 Hinduism 3 2 2 Traditional Chinese religion 4 Social justice movements 4 1 Liberation theology 4 2 Health care 4 3 Health inequalities 4 4 Human rights education 4 5 Ecology and environment 5 Criticism 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 8 1 Articles 8 2 BooksHistory EditMain articles Social contract Justice Corrective justice and Distributive justice An artist s rendering of what Plato might have looked like From Raphael s early 16th century painting Scuola di Atene The different concepts of justice as discussed in ancient Western philosophy were typically centered upon the community Roman copy in marble of a Greek bronze bust of Aristotle by Lysippos c 330 BC The alabaster mantle is modern Plato wrote in The Republic that it would be an ideal state that every member of the community must be assigned to the class for which he finds himself best fitted 25 In an article for J N V University author D R Bhandari says Justice is for Plato at once a part of human virtue and the bond which joins man together in society It is the identical quality that makes good and social Justice is an order and duty of the parts of the soul it is to the soul as health is to the body Plato says that justice is not mere strength but it is a harmonious strength Justice is not the right of the stronger but the effective harmony of the whole All moral conceptions revolve about the good of the whole individual as well as social 26 Plato believed rights existed only between free people and the law should take account in the first instance of relations of inequality in which individuals are treated in proportion to their worth and only secondarily of relations of equality Reflecting this time when slavery and subjugation of women was typical ancient views of justice tended to reflect the rigid class systems that still prevailed On the other hand for the privileged groups strong concepts of fairness and the community existed Distributive justice was said by Aristotle to require that people were distributed goods and assets according to their merit 27 Bust of Socrates Socrates through Plato s dialogue Crito is credited with developing the idea of a social contract whereby people ought to follow the rules of a society and accept its burdens because they have accepted its benefits 28 During the Middle Ages religious scholars particularly such as Thomas Aquinas continued discussion of justice in various ways but ultimately connected being a good citizen to the purpose of serving God After the Renaissance and Reformation the modern concept of social justice as developing human potential began to emerge through the work of a series of authors Baruch Spinoza in On the Improvement of the Understanding 1677 contended that the one true aim of life should be to acquire a human character much more stable than one s own and to achieve this pitch of perfection The chief good is that he should arrive together with other individuals if possible at the possession of the aforesaid character 29 During the enlightenment and responding to the French and American Revolutions Thomas Paine similarly wrote in The Rights of Man 1792 society should give genius a fair and universal chance and so the construction of government ought to be such as to bring forward all that extent of capacity which never fails to appear in revolutions 30 Social justice has been traditionally credited to be coined by Jesuit priest Luigi Taparelli in the 1840s but the expression is older Although there is no certainty about the first use of the term social justice early sources can be found in Europe in the 18th century 31 Some references to the use of the expression are in articles of journals aligned with the spirit of the Enlightenment in which social justice is described as an obligation of the monarch 32 33 also the term is present in books written by Catholic Italian theologians notably members of the Society of Jesus 34 Thus according to this sources and the context social justice was another term for the justice of society the justice that rules the relations among individuals in society without any mention to socio economic equity or human dignity 31 The usage of the term started to become more frequent by Catholic thinkers from the 1840s beginning with the Jesuit Luigi Taparelli in Civilta Cattolica and based on the work of St Thomas Aquinas Taparelli argued that rival capitalist and socialist theories based on subjective Cartesian thinking undermined the unity of society present in Thomistic metaphysics as neither were sufficiently concerned with ethics 18 Writing in 1861 the influential British philosopher and economist John Stuart Mill stated in Utilitarianism his view that Society should treat all equally well who have deserved equally well of it that is who have deserved equally well absolutely This is the highest abstract standard of social and distributive justice towards which all institutions and the efforts of all virtuous citizens should be made in the utmost degree to converge 35 In the later 19th and early 20th century social justice became an important theme in American political and legal philosophy particularly in the work of John Dewey Roscoe Pound and Louis Brandeis One of the prime concerns was the Lochner era decisions of the US Supreme Court to strike down legislation passed by state governments and the Federal government for social and economic improvement such as the eight hour day or the right to join a trade union After the First World War the founding document of the International Labour Organization took up the same terminology in its preamble stating that peace can be established only if it is based on social justice From this point the discussion of social justice entered into mainstream legal and academic discourse In 1931 the Pope Pius XI explicitly referred to the expression along with the concept of subsidiarity for the first time in Catholic social teaching in the encyclical Quadragesimo anno Then again in Divini Redemptoris the church pointed out that the realization of social justice relied on the promotion of the dignity of human person 36 During the 1930s the term was widely associated with pro Nazi and antisemitic groups such as the Christian Front 37 Social Justice was the slogan of Charles Coughlin and the name of his newspaper Because of the documented influence of Divini Redemptoris in its drafters 38 the Constitution of Ireland was the first one to establish the term as a principle of the economy in the State and then other countries around the world did the same throughout the 20th century even in socialist regimes such as the Cuban Constitution in 1976 31 In the late 20th century several liberal and conservative thinkers notably Friedrich Hayek rejected the concept by stating that it did not mean anything or meant too many things 39 However the concept remained highly influential particularly with its promotion by philosophers such as John Rawls Even though the meaning of social justice varies at least three common elements can be identified in the contemporary theories about it a duty of the State to distribute certain vital means such as economic social and cultural rights the protection of human dignity and affirmative actions to promote equal opportunities for everybody 31 Contemporary theory EditPhilosophical perspectives Edit Cosmic values Edit Hunter Lewis work promoting natural healthcare and sustainable economies advocates for conservation as a key premise in social justice His manifesto on sustainability ties the continued thriving of human life to real conditions the environment supporting that life and associates injustice with the detrimental effects of unintended consequences of human actions Quoting classical Greek thinkers like Epicurus on the good of pursuing happiness Hunter also cites ornithologist naturalist and philosopher Alexander Skutch in his book Moral Foundations The common feature which unites the activities most consistently forbidden by the moral codes of civilized peoples is that by their very nature they cannot be both habitual and enduring because they tend to destroy the conditions which make them possible 40 Pope Benedict XVI cites Teilhard de Chardin in a vision of the cosmos as a living host 41 embracing an understanding of ecology that includes humanity s relationship to others that pollution affects not just the natural world but interpersonal relations as well Cosmic harmony justice and peace are closely interrelated If you want to cultivate peace protect creation 42 In The Quest for Cosmic Justice Thomas Sowell writes that seeking utopia while admirable may have disastrous effects if done without strong consideration of the economic underpinnings that support contemporary society 43 John Rawls Edit Main article John Rawls Political philosopher John Rawls draws on the utilitarian insights of Bentham and Mill the social contract ideas of John Locke and the categorical imperative ideas of Kant His first statement of principle was made in A Theory of Justice where he proposed that Each person possesses an inviolability founded on justice that even the welfare of society as a whole cannot override For this reason justice denies that the loss of freedom for some is made right by a greater good shared by others 44 A deontological proposition that echoes Kant in framing the moral good of justice in absolutist terms His views are definitively restated in Political Liberalism where society is seen as a fair system of co operation over time from one generation to the next 45 All societies have a basic structure of social economic and political institutions both formal and informal In testing how well these elements fit and work together Rawls based a key test of legitimacy on the theories of social contract To determine whether any particular system of collectively enforced social arrangements is legitimate he argued that one must look for agreement by the people who are subject to it but not necessarily to an objective notion of justice based on coherent ideological grounding Obviously not every citizen can be asked to participate in a poll to determine his or her consent to every proposal in which some degree of coercion is involved so one has to assume that all citizens are reasonable Rawls constructed an argument for a two stage process to determine a citizen s hypothetical agreement The citizen agrees to be represented by X for certain purposes and to that extent X holds these powers as a trustee for the citizen X agrees that enforcement in a particular social context is legitimate The citizen therefore is bound by this decision because it is the function of the trustee to represent the citizen in this way This applies to one person who represents a small group e g the organiser of a social event setting a dress code as equally as it does to national governments which are ultimate trustees holding representative powers for the benefit of all citizens within their territorial boundaries Governments that fail to provide for welfare of their citizens according to the principles of justice are not legitimate To emphasise the general principle that justice should rise from the people and not be dictated by the law making powers of governments Rawls asserted that There is a general presumption against imposing legal and other restrictions on conduct without sufficient reason But this presumption creates no special priority for any particular liberty 46 This is support for an unranked set of liberties that reasonable citizens in all states should respect and uphold to some extent the list proposed by Rawls matches the normative human rights that have international recognition and direct enforcement in some nation states where the citizens need encouragement to act in a way that fixes a greater degree of equality of outcome According to Rawls the basic liberties that every good society should guarantee are Freedom of thought Liberty of conscience as it affects social relationships on the grounds of religion philosophy and morality Political liberties e g representative democratic institutions freedom of speech and the press and freedom of assembly Freedom of association Freedoms necessary for the liberty and integrity of the person namely freedom from slavery freedom of movement and a reasonable degree of freedom to choose one s occupation and Rights and liberties covered by the rule of law Thomas Pogge Edit Thomas Pogge Thomas Pogge s arguments pertain to a standard of social justice that creates human rights deficits He assigns responsibility to those who actively cooperate in designing or imposing the social institution that the order is foreseeable as harming the global poor and is reasonably avoidable Pogge argues that social institutions have a negative duty to not harm the poor 47 48 Pogge speaks of institutional cosmopolitanism and assigns responsibility to institutional schemes 49 for deficits of human rights An example given is slavery and third parties A third party should not recognize or enforce slavery The institutional order should be held responsible only for deprivations of human rights that it establishes or authorizes The current institutional design he says systematically harms developing economies by enabling corporate tax evasion 50 illicit financial flows corruption trafficking of people and weapons Joshua Cohen disputes his claims based on the fact that some poor countries have done well with the current institutional design 51 Elizabeth Kahn argues that some of these responsibilities vague should apply globally 52 United Nations Edit The United Nations calls social justice an underlying principle for peaceful and prosperous coexistence within and among nations 53 The United Nations 2006 document Social Justice in an Open World The Role of the United Nations states that Social justice may be broadly understood as the fair and compassionate distribution of the fruits of economic growth 54 16 The term social justice was seen by the U N as a substitute for the protection of human rights and first appeared in United Nations texts during the second half of the 1960s At the initiative of the Soviet Union and with the support of developing countries the term was used in the Declaration on Social Progress and Development adopted in 1969 54 52 The same document reports From the comprehensive global perspective shaped by the United Nations Charter and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights neglect of the pursuit of social justice in all its dimensions translates into de facto acceptance of a future marred by violence repression and chaos 54 6 The report concludes Social justice is not possible without strong and coherent redistributive policies conceived and implemented by public agencies 54 16 The same UN document offers a concise history T he notion of social justice is relatively new None of history s great philosophers not Plato or Aristotle or Confucius or Averroes or even Rousseau or Kant saw the need to consider justice or the redress of injustices from a social perspective The concept first surfaced in Western thought and political language in the wake of the industrial revolution and the parallel development of the socialist doctrine It emerged as an expression of protest against what was perceived as the capitalist exploitation of labor and as a focal point for the development of measures to improve the human condition It was born as a revolutionary slogan embodying the ideals of progress and fraternity Following the revolutions that shook Europe in the mid 1800s social justice became a rallying cry for progressive thinkers and political activists By the mid twentieth century the concept of social justice had become central to the ideologies and programs of virtually all the leftist and centrist political parties around the world 54 11 12 Another key area of human rights and social justice is the United Nations s defense of children s rights worldwide In 1989 the Convention on the Rights of the Child was adopted and available for signature ratification and accession by General Assembly resolution 44 25 55 According to OHCHR this convention entered into force on 2 September 1990 This convention upholds that all states have the obligation to protect the child from all forms of physical or mental violence injury or abuse neglect or negligent treatment maltreatment or exploitation including sexual abuse 55 Religious perspectives EditAbrahamic religions Edit Christianity Edit See also Christian ethics and Christian democracy Evangelicalism Edit Time magazine noted that younger Evangelicals also increasingly engage in social justice 56 John Stott traced the call for social justice back to the cross The cross is a revelation of God s justice as well as of his love That is why the community of the cross should concern itself with social justice as well as with loving philanthropy 57 Methodism Edit From its founding Methodism was a Christian social justice movement Under John Wesley s direction Methodists became leaders in many social justice issues of the day including the prison reform and abolition movements Wesley himself was among the first to preach for slaves rights attracting significant opposition 58 59 60 Today social justice plays a major role in the United Methodist Church and the Free Methodist Church 61 The Book of Discipline of the United Methodist Church says We hold governments responsible for the protection of the rights of the people to free and fair elections and to the freedoms of speech religion assembly communications media and petition for redress of grievances without fear of reprisal to the right to privacy and to the guarantee of the rights to adequate food clothing shelter education and health care 62 The United Methodist Church also teaches population control as part of its doctrine 63 Catholicism Edit This section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available May 2022 Main article Catholic social teaching Catholic social teaching consists of those aspects of Roman Catholic doctrine which relate to matters dealing with the respect of the individual human life A distinctive feature of Catholic social doctrine is its concern for the poorest and most vulnerable members of society Two of the seven key areas 64 of Catholic social teaching are pertinent to social justice Life and dignity of the human person The foundational principle of all Catholic social teaching is the sanctity of all human life and the inherent dignity of every human person from conception to natural death Human life must be valued above all material possessions Preferential option for the poor and vulnerable Catholics believe Jesus taught that on the Day of Judgement God will ask what each person did to help the poor and needy Amen I say to you whatever you did for one of these least brothers of mine you did for me 65 The Catholic Church believes that through words prayers and deeds one must show solidarity with and compassion for the poor The moral test of any society is how it treats its most vulnerable members The poor have the most urgent moral claim on the conscience of the nation People are called to look at public policy decisions in terms of how they affect the poor 66 Modern Catholic social teaching is often thought to have begun with the encyclicals of Pope Leo XIII 18 Pope Leo XIII who studied under Taparelli published in 1891 the encyclical Rerum novarum On the Condition of the Working Classes lit On new things rejecting both socialism and capitalism while defending labor unions and private property He stated that society should be based on cooperation and not class conflict and competition In this document Leo set out the Catholic Church s response to the social instability and labor conflict that had arisen in the wake of industrialization and had led to the rise of socialism The Pope advocated that the role of the state was to promote social justice through the protection of rights while the church must speak out on social issues to teach correct social principles and ensure class harmony The encyclical Quadragesimo anno On Reconstruction of the Social Order literally in the fortieth year of 1931 by Pope Pius XI encourages a living wage 67 subsidiarity and advocates that social justice is a personal virtue as well as an attribute of the social order saying that society can be just only if individuals and institutions are just Pope John Paul II added much to the corpus of the Catholic social teaching penning three encyclicals which focus on issues such as economics politics geo political situations ownership of the means of production private property and the social mortgage and private property The encyclicals Laborem exercens Sollicitudo rei socialis and Centesimus annus are just a small portion of his overall contribution to Catholic social justice Pope John Paul II was a strong advocate of justice and human rights and spoke forcefully for the poor He addresses issues such as the problems that technology can present should it be misused and admits a fear that the progress of the world is not true progress at all if it should denigrate the value of the human person He argued in Centesimus annus that private property markets and honest labor were the keys to alleviating the miseries of the poor and to enabling a life that can express the fullness of the human person Pope Benedict XVI s encyclical Deus caritas est God is Love of 2006 claims that justice is the defining concern of the state and the central concern of politics and not of the church which has charity as its central social concern It said that the laity has the specific responsibility of pursuing social justice in civil society and that the church s active role in social justice should be to inform the debate using reason and natural law and also by providing moral and spiritual formation for those involved in politics The official Catholic doctrine on social justice can be found in the book Compendium of the Social Doctrine of the Church published in 2004 and updated in 2006 by the Pontifical Council Iustitia et Pax The Catechism of the Catholic Church 1928 1948 contains more detail of the church s view of social justice 68 Islam Edit In Muslim history Islamic governance has often been associated with social justice additional citation s needed Establishment of social justice was one of the motivating factors of the Abbasid revolt against the Umayyads 69 The Shi a believe that the return of the Mahdi will herald in the messianic age of justice and the Mahdi along with the Isa Jesus will end plunder torture oppression and discrimination 70 For the Muslim Brotherhood the implementation of social justice would require the rejection of consumerism and communism The Brotherhood strongly affirmed the right to private property as well as differences in personal wealth due to factors such as hard work However the Brotherhood held Muslims had an obligation to assist those Muslims in need It held that zakat alms giving was not voluntary charity but rather the poor had the right to assistance from the more fortunate 71 Most Islamic governments therefore enforce the zakat through taxes Judaism Edit Main article Tikkun olam In To Heal a Fractured World The Ethics of Responsibility Rabbi Jonathan Sacks states that social justice has a central place in Judaism One of Judaism s most distinctive and challenging ideas is its ethics of responsibility reflected in the concepts of simcha gladness or joy tzedakah the religious obligation to perform charity and philanthropic acts chesed deeds of kindness and tikkun olam repairing the world 72 Eastern religions Edit Hinduism Edit The present day Jati hierarchy is undergoing changes for a variety of reasons including social justice which is a politically popular stance in democratic India Institutionalized affirmative action has promoted this The disparity and wide inequalities in social behaviour of the jatis exclusive endogamous communities centred on traditional occupations has led to various reform movements in Hinduism While legally outlawed the caste system remains strong in practice 73 Traditional Chinese religion Edit Main article Mandate of Heaven The Chinese concept of Tian Ming has occasionally been perceived by whom as an expression of social justice 74 Through it the deposition of unfair rulers is justified in that civic dissatisfaction and economical disasters is perceived as Heaven withdrawing its favor from the Emperor A successful rebellion is considered definite proof that the Emperor is unfit to rule Social justice movements EditSocial justice is also a concept that is used to describe the movement towards a socially just world e g the Global Justice Movement In this context social justice is based on the concepts of human rights and equality and can be defined as the way in which human rights are manifested in the everyday lives of people at every level of society 75 Several movements are working to achieve social justice in society These movements are working toward the realization of a world where all members of a society regardless of background or procedural justice have basic human rights and equal access to the benefits of their society 76 Liberation theology Edit Main article Liberation theology Liberation theology 77 is a movement in Christian theology which conveys the teachings of Jesus Christ in terms of a liberation from unjust economic political or social conditions It has been described by proponents as an interpretation of Christian faith through the poor s suffering their struggle and hope and a critique of society and the Catholic faith and Christianity through the eyes of the poor 78 and by detractors as Christianity perverted by Marxism and Communism 79 Although liberation theology has grown into an international and inter denominational movement it began as a movement within the Catholic Church in Latin America in the 1950s 1960s It arose principally as a moral reaction to the poverty caused by social injustice in that region 80 It achieved prominence in the 1970s and 1980s The term was coined by the Peruvian priest Gustavo Gutierrez who wrote one of the movement s most famous books A Theology of Liberation 1971 According to Sarah Kleeb Marx would surely take issue she writes with the appropriation of his works in a religious context there is no way to reconcile Marx s views of religion with those of Gutierrez they are simply incompatible Despite this in terms of their understanding of the necessity of a just and righteous world and the nearly inevitable obstructions along such a path the two have much in common and particularly in the first edition of A Theology of Liberation the use of Marxian theory is quite evident 81 Other noted exponents are Leonardo Boff of Brazil Carlos Mugica of Argentina Jon Sobrino of El Salvador and Juan Luis Segundo of Uruguay 82 83 Health care Edit Social justice has more recently made its way into the field of bioethics Discussion involves topics such as affordable access to health care especially for low income households and families The discussion also raises questions such as whether society should bear healthcare costs for low income families and whether the global marketplace is the best way to distribute healthcare Ruth Faden of the Johns Hopkins Berman Institute of Bioethics and Madison Powers of Georgetown University focus their analysis of social justice on which inequalities matter the most They develop a social justice theory that answers some of these questions in concrete settings Social injustices occur when there is a preventable difference in health states among a population of people These social injustices take the form of health inequities when negative health states such as malnourishment and infectious diseases are more prevalent in impoverished nations 84 These negative health states can often be prevented by providing social and economic structures such as primary healthcare which ensures the general population has equal access to health care services regardless of income level gender education or any other stratifying factors Integrating social justice with health inherently reflects the social determinants of health model without discounting the role of the bio medical model 85 Health inequalities Edit The sources of health inequalities are rooted in injustices associated with racism sex discrimination and social class Richard Hofrichter and his colleagues examine the political implications of various perspectives used to explain health inequities and explore alternative strategies for eliminating them 86 Human rights education Edit Main article Human rights education The Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action affirm that Human rights education should include peace democracy development and social justice as set forth in international and regional human rights instruments to achieve common understanding and awareness to strengthen universal commitment to human rights 87 Ecology and environment Edit Main articles Climate justice and environmental justice Social justice principles are embedded in the larger environmental movement The third principle of the Earth Charter is social and economic justice which is described as seeking to eradicate poverty as an ethical social and environmental imperative ensure that economic activities and institutions at all levels promote human development in an equitable and sustainable manner affirm gender equality and equity as prerequisites to sustainable development and ensure universal access to education health care and economic opportunity and uphold the right of all without discrimination to a natural and social environment supportive of human dignity bodily health and spiritual well being with special attention to the rights of indigenous peoples and minorities The climate justice and environmental justice movements also incorporate social justice principles ideas and practices Climate justice and environmental justice as movements within the larger ecological and environmental movement each incorporate social justice in a particular way Climate justice includes concern for social justice pertaining to greenhouse gas emissions 88 climate induced environmental displacement 89 as well as climate change mitigation and adaptation Environmental justice includes concern for social justice pertaining to either environmental benefits 90 or environmental pollution 91 based on their equitable distribution across communities of color communities of various socio and economic stratification or any other barriers to justice Criticism EditMichael Novak argues that social justice has seldom been adequately defined arguing W hole books and treatises have been written about social justice without ever defining it It is allowed to float in the air as if everyone will recognize an instance of it when it appears This vagueness seems indispensable The minute one begins to define social justice one runs into embarrassing intellectual difficulties It becomes most often a term of art whose operational meaning is We need a law against that In other words it becomes an instrument of ideological intimidation for the purpose of gaining the power of legal coercion 92 Friedrich Hayek of the Austrian School of economics rejected the very idea of social justice as meaningless self contradictory and ideological believing that to realize any degree of social justice is unfeasible and that the attempt to do so must destroy all liberty There can be no test by which we can discover what is socially unjust because there is no subject by which such an injustice can be committed and there are no rules of individual conduct the observance of which in the market order would secure to the individuals and groups the position which as such as distinguished from the procedure by which it is determined would appear just to us Social justice does not belong to the category of error but to that of nonsense like the term a moral stone 93 Hayek argued that proponents of social justice often present it as a moral virtue but most of their descriptions pertain to impersonal states of affairs e g income inequality poverty which are cited as social injustice Hayek argued that social justice is either a virtue or it is not If it is it can only be ascribed to the actions of individuals However most who use the term ascribe it to social systems so social justice in fact describes a regulative principle of order they are interested not in virtue but power 92 For Hayek this notion of social justices presupposes that people are guided by specific external directions rather than internal personal rules of just conduct It further presupposes that one can never be held accountable for ones own behaviour as this would be blaming the victim According to Hayek the function of social justice is to blame someone else often attributed to the system or those who are supposed mythically to control it Thus it is based on the appealing idea of you suffer your suffering is caused by powerful others these oppressors must be destroyed 92 Ben O Neill of the University of New South Wales and the Mises Institute argues For advocates of social justice the notion of rights is a mere term of entitlement indicative of a claim for any possible desirable good no matter how important or trivial abstract or tangible recent or ancient It is merely an assertion of desire and a declaration of intention to use the language of rights to acquire said desire In fact since the program of social justice inevitably involves claims for government provision of goods paid for through the efforts of others the term actually refers to an intention to use force to acquire one s desires Not to earn desirable goods by rational thought and action production and voluntary exchange but to go in there and forcibly take goods from those who can supply them 94 See also EditActivism Beyond Vietnam A Time to Break Silence one of many pro social justice speeches delivered by Martin Luther King Jr Choosing the Common Good Counterculture of the 1960s Economic justice Education for Justice Environmental racism Essentially contested concept Global justice Labour law and labour rights Left wing politics Resource justice Right to education Right to health Right to housing Right to social security Social justice art Social justice warrior Social law Social work Solidarity National Union for Social Justice organization World Day of Social Justice All pages with titles beginning with Social justice All pages with titles containing Social justiceReferences Edit social justice Oxford languages Retrieved 26 August 2021 Aristotle The Politics ca 350 BC Clark Mary T 2015 Augustine on Justice a Chapter in Augustine and Social Justice Lexington Books pp 3 10 ISBN 978 1 4985 0918 3 Banai Ayelet Ronzoni Miriam Schemmel Christian 2011 Social Justice Global Dynamics Theoretical and Empirical Perspectives Florence Taylor and Francis ISBN 978 0 203 81929 6 Kitching G N 2001 Seeking Social Justice Through Globalization Escaping a Nationalist Perspective University Park Pa Pennsylvania State University Press pp 3 10 ISBN 978 0 271 02377 9 Hillman Arye L 2008 Globalization and Social Justice The Singapore Economic Review 53 2 173 189 doi 10 1142 s0217590808002896 Lawrence Cecile amp Natalie Churn 2012 Movements in Time Revolution Social Justice and Times of Change Newcastle upon Tyne UK Cambridge Scholars Pub pp xi xv ISBN 978 1 4438 4552 6 Agartan Kaan 2014 Globalization and the Question of Social Justice Sociology Compass 8 6 903 915 doi 10 1111 soc4 12162 El Khoury Ann 2015 Globalization Development and Social Justice A propositional political approach Florence Taylor and Francis pp 1 20 ISBN 978 1 317 50480 1 John Rawls A Theory of Justice 1971 4 the principles of social justice they provide a way of assigning rights and duties in the basic institutions of society and they define the appropriate distribution of benefits and burdens of social co operation Aiqing Zhang Feifei Xia Chengwei Li 2007 The Antecedents of Help Giving in Chinese Culture Attribution Judgment of Responsibility Expectation Change and the Reaction of Affect Social Behavior and Personality 35 1 135 142 doi 10 2224 sbp 2007 35 1 135 Smith Justin E H 2015 Nature Human Nature and Human Difference Race in Early Modern Philosophy Princeton University Press p 17 ISBN 978 1 4008 6631 1 Trương Thanh Đạm 2013 Migration Gender and Social Justice Perspectives on Human Insecurity Springer pp 3 26 ISBN 978 3 642 28012 2 Teklu Abebe Abay 2010 We Cannot Clap with One Hand Global Socio Political Differences in Social Support for People with Visual Impairment International Journal of Ethiopian Studies 5 1 93 105 J Zajda S Majhanovich V Rust Education and Social Justice 2006 ISBN 1 4020 4721 5 Clark Mary T 2015 Augustine on Justice a Chapter in Augustine and Social Justice Lexington Books pp 3 10 ISBN 978 1 4985 0918 3 Paine Thomas Agrarian Justice Printed by R Folwell for Benjamin Franklin Bache a b c Behr Thomas Social Justice and Subsidiarity Luigi Taparelli and the Origins of Modern Catholic Social Thought Washington DC Catholic University of American Press December 2019 Luigi Taparelli SJ Saggio teoretico di dritto naturale appogiato sul fatto Palermo Antonio Muratori 1840 43 Sections 341 364 Behr Thomas Social Justice and Subsidiarity Luigi Taparelli and the Origins of Modern Catholic Social Thought Washington DC Catholic University of American Press December 2019 pp 149 154 Rosmini Serbati The Constitution under Social Justice trans A Mingardi Lanham Lexington Books 2007 Perez Garzon Carlos Andres 14 January 2018 Unveiling the Meaning of Social Justice in Colombia Mexican Law Review 10 2 27 66 ISSN 2448 5306 Archived from the original on 29 March 2018 Retrieved 28 March 2018 The Preamble of ILO Constitution Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action Part II D Plato The Republic ca 380BC 20th WCP Plato s Concept of Justice An Analysis Archived from the original on 5 October 2016 Nicomachean Ethics V 3 Plato Crito ca 380 BC B Spinoza On the Improvement of the Understanding 1677 para 13 T Paine Rights of Man 1792 197 a b c d Perez Garzon Carlos Andres 14 January 2018 Unveiling the Meaning of Social Justice in Colombia Mexican Law Review 10 2 27 66 ISSN 2448 5306 Archived from the original on 29 March 2018 Retrieved 28 March 2018 Rousseau 1774 Journal encyclopedique Ed Pierre Rousseau in French De l Imprimerie du Journal L Esprit des journaux francois et etrangers in French Valade 1784 L Episcopato ossia della Potesta di governar la chiesa Dissertazione in Italian na 1789 JS Mill Utilitarianism 1863 Divini Redemptoris March 19 1937 PIUS XI w2 vatican va Retrieved 28 March 2018 The Press Crackdown on Coughlin Time 27 April 1942 Retrieved 24 February 2022 Moyn Samuel 2014 The Secret History of Constitutional Dignity Yale Human Rights and Development Journal 17 1 ISSN 1548 2596 FA Hayek Law Legislation and Liberty 1973 vol II ch 3 Hunter Lewis 14 October 2009 Sustainability The Complete Concept Environment Healthcare and Economy PDF ChangeThis Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 23 January 2011 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The Cross of Christ InterVarsity Press p 185 ISBN 978 0 8308 6636 6 S R Valentine John Bennet amp the Origins of Methodism and the Evangelical revival in England Scarecrow Press Lanham 1997 Carey Brycchan John Wesley 1703 1791 The British Abolitionists Brycchan Carey 11 July 2008 5 October 2009 Brycchancarey com Archived 29 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine Wesley John Thoughts Upon Slavery John Wesley Holiness of Heart and Life Charles Yrigoyen 1996 5 October 2009 Gbgm umc org Archived 16 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine Do Justice First Free Methodist Church Retrieved 12 June 2021 permanent dead link The Book of Discipline of The United Methodist Church 2012 164 V umc org Archived 6 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine The Book of Discipline of The United Methodist Church 2008 162 K umc org Archived 6 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Seven Key Themes of Catholic Social Teaching Archived from the original on 8 June 2007 Retrieved 29 March 2014 Matthew 25 40 Option for the Poor Major themes from Catholic Social Teaching Archived 16 February 2006 at the Wayback Machine Office for Social Justice Archdiocese of St Paul and Minneapolis Popularised by John A Ryan although see Sidney Webb and Beatrice Webb Industrial Democracy 1897 Catechism of the Catholic Church Social justice Vatican va Archived from the original on 5 November 2013 Retrieved 29 March 2014 John L Esposito 1998 Islam and Politics Syracuse University Press p 17 John L Esposito 1998 Islam and Politics Syracuse University Press p 205 John L Esposito 1998 Islam and Politics Syracuse University Press pp 147 8 Sacks Jonathan 2005 To Heal a Fractured World The Ethics of Responsibility New York Schocken p 3 ISBN 978 0 8264 8622 6 Patil Vijaykumar 26 January 2015 Caste system hindering the goal of social justice Siddaramaiah The Hindu Archived from the original on 4 September 2015 Lee Jen der 2014 Crime and Punishment The Case of Liu Hui in the Wei Shu Early Medieval China A Sourcebook New York Columbia University Press pp 156 165 ISBN 978 0 231 15987 6 Just Comment Volume 3 Number 1 2000 Capeheart Loretta Milovanovic Dragan Social Justice Theories Issues and Movements In the mass media Liberation Theology can sometimes be used loosely to refer to a wide variety of activist Christian thought This article uses the term in the narrow sense outlined here Berryman Phillip Liberation Theology essential facts about the revolutionary movement in Latin America and beyond 1987 David Horowitz first describes liberation theology as a form of Marxised Christianity which has validity despite the awkward phrasing but then he calls it a form of Marxist Leninist ideology which is simply not true for most liberation theology Robert Shaffer Acceptable Bounds of Academic Discourse Archived 4 September 2013 at the Wayback Machine Organization of American Historians Newsletter 35 November 2007 URL retrieved 12 July 2010 Liberation Theology and Its Role in Latin America Elisabeth Erin Williams Monitor Journal of International Studies The College of William and Mary Sarah Kleeb Envisioning Emancipation Karl Marx Gustavo Gutierrez and the Struggle of Liberation Theology permanent dead link Presented at the Annual Meeting of the Canadian Society for the Study of Religion CSSR Toronto 2006 Retrieved 22 October 2012 dead link Richard P McBrien Catholicism Harper Collins 1994 chapter IV Gustavo Gutierrez A Theology of Liberation First Spanish edition published in Lima Peru 1971 first English edition published by Orbis Books Maryknoll New York 1973 Farmer Paul E Bruce Nizeye Sara Stulac and Salmaan Keshavjee 2006 Structural Violence and Clinical Medicine PLoS Medicine 1686 1691 Cueto Marcos 2004 The ORIGINS of Primary Health Care and SELECTIVE Primary Health Care Am J Public Health 94 11 1868 Hofrichter Richard ed 2003 Health and social justice Politics ideology and inequity in the distribution of disease San Francisco CA Jossey Bass ISBN 978 0 7879 6733 8 Vienna Declaration and Programme of Action Part II paragraph 80 EA Posner and CR Sunstein Global Warming and Social Justice JS Mastaler Social Justice and Environmental Displacement A Dahlberg R Rohde K Sandell 2010 National Parks and Environmental Justice Comparing Access Rights and Ideological Legacies in Three Countries Archived 1 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine 8 no 3 pp 209 224 RD Bullard 2005 The Quest for Environmental Justice Human Rights and the Politics of Pollution Counterpoint ISBN 978 1 57805 120 5 a b c Novak Michael Defining social justice First things 2000 11 12 Hayek F A 1982 Law Legislation and Liberty Vol 2 Routledge p 78 O Neill Ben 16 March 2011 The Injustice of Social Justice Archived 28 October 2014 at the Wayback Machine Mises InstituteFurther reading Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Social justice Articles Edit C Perez Garzon What is social justice A new history of its meaning in the transnational legal discourse 2019 43 Revista Derecho del Estado 67 106 originally in Spanish Que es justicia social Una nueva historia de su significado en el discurso juridico transnacional LD Brandeis The Living Law 1915 1916 10 Illinois Law Review 461 A Etzioni The Fair Society Uniting America Restoring the Vital Center to American Democracy Archived 24 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine in N Garfinkle and D Yankelovich eds Yale University Press 2005 pp 211 223 Otto von Gierke The Social Role of Private Law 2016 translated and introduced by E McGaughey originally in German Die soziale Aufgabe des Privatrechts M Novak Defining Social Justice 2000 First Things B O Neill The Injustice of Social Justice Mises Institute R Pound Social Justice and Legal Justice 1912 75 Central Law Journal 455 M Powers and R Faden Inequalities in health inequalities in health care four generations of discussion about justice and cost effectiveness analysis 2000 10 2 Kennedy Inst Ethics Journal 109 127 M Powers and R Faden Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care An Ethical Analysis of When and How They Matter in Unequal Treatment Confronting Racial and Ethnic Disparities in Health Care National Academy of Sciences Institute of Medicine 2002 722 38 United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Social Justice in an Open World The Role of the United Nations 2006 ST ESA 305Books Edit AB Atkinson Social Justice and Public Policy 1982 previews Gad Barzilai Communities and Law Politics and Cultures of Legal Identities University of Michigan Press analysis of justice for non ruling communities TN Carver Essays in Social Justice 1915 Chapter links C Quigley The Evolution of Civilizations An Introduction to Historical Analysis 1961 2nd edition 1979 P Corning The Fair Society The Science of Human Nature and the Pursuit of Social Justice Chicago UP 2011 WL Droel What is Social Justice ACTA Publications 2011 R Faden and M Powers Social Justice The Moral Foundations of Public Health and Health Policy OUP 2006 ISBN 978 0 19 518926 1 J Franklin ed Life to the Full Rights and Social Justice in Australia Connor Court 2007 LC Frederking 2013 Reconstructing Social Justice Routledge ISBN 978 1 138 19402 1 FA Hayek Law Legislation and Liberty 1973 vol II ch 3 G Kitching Seeking Social Justice through Globalization Escaping a Nationalist Perspective 2003 JS Mill Utilitarianism 1863 T Massaro S J Living Justice Catholic Social Teaching in Action Rowman amp Littlefield 2012 John Rawls A Theory of Justice Harvard University Press 1971 John Rawls Political Liberalism Columbia University Press 1993 C Philomena B Hoose and G Mannion eds Social Justice Theological and Practical Explorations 2007 A Swift Political Philosophy 3rd edn 2013 ch 1 Michael J Thompson The Limits of Liberalism A Republican Theory of Social Justice International Journal of Ethics vol 7 no 3 2011 Social justice at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Data from Wikidata Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Social justice amp oldid 1128076996, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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