Skip to product information
1 of 1

Contexts of Justice

Regular price $31.95
Sale price $31.95 Regular price $31.95
Sale Sold out
Contexts of Justice, highly acclaimed when it was published in Germany, provides a significant new intervention into the important debate between communitarianism and liberalism. Rainer Forst argu...
Read More
  • Format:
  • 27 February 2002
View Product Details
Contexts of Justice, highly acclaimed when it was published in Germany, provides a significant new intervention into the important debate between communitarianism and liberalism. Rainer Forst argues for a theory of "contexts of justice" that leads beyond the narrow confines of this debate as it has been understood until now and posits the possibility of a new conception of social and political justice. This book brings refreshing clarity to a complex topic as it provides a synthesis of traditions and theories that leads to a truly original approach.

Forst makes a four-part distinction to decipher the debate between communitarianism and liberalism. These four parts concern the constitution of the self, the neutrality of law, the ethos of democracy, and the opposition between universalism and contextualism. He shows that a comprehensive theory of justice needs to take these different contexts adequately into account. He discusses recent debates about discursive democracy and feminist critiques of liberalism, and addresses such topics as multiculturalism and civil society.
files/i.png Icon
Price: $31.95
Pages: 358
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Series: Philosophy, Social Theory, and the Rule of Law
Publication Date: 27 February 2002
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780520232259
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

Rainer Forst is Assistant Professor at the Institute of Philosophy, Johann Wolfgang Goethe University in Frankfurt.

Preface
Introduction: Liberalism, Communitarianism, and the Question of Justice

1. The Constitution of the Self
1.1. The Critique of the "Unencumbered Self"
1.2. Ethical Person and Legal Person

2. The Ethical Neutrality of Law
2.1. Liberalism and Neutrality
2.2. Individual Rights and Autonomy as a Good
2.3. General Law and Particular Identities
2.4. Basic Individual Rights

3. The Ethos of Democracy
3.1. Modus Vivendi and Overlapping Consensus
3.2. Substantivist and Republican Communitarianism
3.3. Civil Society and Deliberative Democracy
3.4. Citizenship and Social Justice

4. Universalism and Contextualism
4.1. A Contextualist Universalism
4.2. Constructivism and Practical Reason
4.3. Which Person? Whose Reason?
4.4. Ethical Universalism and Modern Identity

5. Contexts of Justice
5.1. Justice and the Good
5.2. Contexts of Justification
5.3. Contexts of Recognition

Notes
Bibliography
Index