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  1. Feb 7, 2012 · In recent years, the idea of the politics of recognition has become an increasingly popular way of thinking about a wide range of political phenomena, from the logic of social struggles to the nature of social justice.

    • Springer

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  2. In recent decades, struggles for recognition have increasingly dominated the political landscape. 1 Recognition theorists such as Charles Taylor (1994) and Axel Honneth (1995) seek to interpret and justify these struggles through the idea that our identity is shaped, at least partly, by our relations with other people.

    • Paddy McQueen
    • 2015
  3. This chapter investigates the relationship between the so-called ‘politics of recognition’ and the philosophical discussion of principles of distributive justice.

  4. "The Politics of Recognition" An Essay by Charles Taylor. With commentary by Amy Gutmann, Editor, Steven C. Rockefeller, Michael Walzer, and Susan Wolf. Can a democratic society treat all its members as equals and also recognize their specific cultural identities? Should it try to ensure the survival of specific cultural groups?

  5. The Politics of Recognition. In: Gutmann A (ed.) . Princeton: Princeton University Press; 1995. p.25-74. Please login or register with De Gruyter to order this product. The Politics of Recognition was published in Multiculturalism on page 25.

    • Charles Taylor
    • 1995
  6. Abstract. Rooted in social, political, and moral philosophy, theories of social recognition constitute a paradigm made up of various approaches and conceptions associated with recognition.

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  8. Apr 30, 2021 · Recognition, in its concrete, cultural and historical varieties, was to be a constitutive part of justice. The dialogical dimensions of subjectivity, underplayed or ignored by both Marxism and liberalism, would become integrated within critical theory and radical politics.

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