Yahoo Web Search

Search results

      • This chapter examines the nature of institutional justice, that is, the requirement to respect entitlements which arise from qualification under an established rule or institution. It is generally supposed that where some particular rule is in operation those who are denied that to which they are entitled under those rules are treated unjustly.
      academic.oup.com/book/6315/chapter/150017034
  1. People also ask

  2. The Institute for Justice (IJ) is a non-profit public interest law firm in the United States.

  3. In this paper, Miranda Fricker's delineation of epistemic injustices is pushed a little further, to introduce a new inclusion-an institutive injustice, to go alongside her testimonial and hermeneutic injustices.

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › JusticeJustice - Wikipedia

    Justice is an ideal the world fails to live up to, sometimes due to deliberate opposition to justice despite understanding, which could be disastrous. The question of institutive justice raises issues of legitimacy, procedure, codification and interpretation, which are considered by legal theorists and by philosophers of law. [62]

  5. This chapter examines the nature of institutional justice, that is, the requirement to respect entitlements which arise from qualification under.

  6. Searle’s new general theory of institutional facts is still liable to this problem. This time the distinction makes its appearance in the book (1995: 27) with the help of the following pair of examples: ‘drive on the right-hand side of the road’ (regulative) and ‘the rules of chess’ (constitutive).

  7. ABSTRACT. This paper examines the intrinsic relation between institutions and social justice. Its starting point is that processes of institutionalization invoke societal groups to articulate justice demands which, in their turn, give rise to processes of institutional redesign. In liberal democracies, demands for justice are articulated as a ...

  8. Justice, Harvard philosopher John Rawls (1921-2002) claimed, is the first virtue of institutions. Certainly justice seems to be the first concern of contemporary political theorists, and has been since Rawls published A Theory of Justice in 1971.

  1. People also search for