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The capabilities approach

by
May 2007, no. 291

Frontiers of Justice: Disability, nationality, species membership by Martha C. Nussbaum

Harvard University Press, $74.95 hb, 487 pp

The capabilities approach

by
May 2007, no. 291

The concept of justice, like all the fundamental philosophical concepts – meaning, truth and so on – is perplexing. Justice has something to do with the distribution of ‘goods’ or benefits and ‘bads’ or burdens. Retributive justice aims to inflict a just burden – punishment – on the delinquent, or to take something away (‘make the offender pay’). Corrective justice, in the form of tort law, prescribes how victims who have lost goods unfairly should be compensated. Social justice is concerned with the fair or just distribution of social goods within a political dispensation. The definitional circularity here is obvious, and it is not clear that we can escape it.

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