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Paul Joseph Kelly (editor) - Impartiality, Neutrality and Justice: Re-reading Brian Barrys Justice as Impartiality

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Brian Barrys Justice as Impartiality confronts issues at the heart of modern political philosophy. This important collection examines various aspects of his argument and expands the discussion beyond the text to explore wider issues at the center of contemporary debates about the nature and theories of distributive justice. It brings together responses from a wide range of Barrys critics including feminists, utilitarians, mutual advantage theorists, care theorists and anti-contractarians. Suitable for both undergraduates and academics working in political and legal theory, this text serves as an ideal companion volume to Barrys work. The expansion of each contributors focus beyond the issues raised by Barry means this text also stands as a contribution to political thought in its own right.

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title Impartiality Neutrality and Justice Re-reading Brian Barrys - photo 1

title:Impartiality, Neutrality and Justice : Re-reading Brian Barry's Justice As Impartiality
author:Kelly, P. J.
publisher:Edinburgh University Press
isbn10 | asin:0748610197
print isbn13:9780748610198
ebook isbn13:9780585102757
language:English
subjectBarry, Brian M.--Justice as impartiality, Justice, Fairness.
publication date:1998
lcc:JC578.I45 1998eb
ddc:320/.01/1
subject:Barry, Brian M.--Justice as impartiality, Justice, Fairness.
Page iii
Impartiality, Neutrality and Justice
Re-reading Brian Barry's Justice as Impartiality
Edited by
Paul Kelly
Edinburgh University Press
Page iv
in this edition, Edinburgh University Press, 1998.
Copyright in the individual contributions is retained
by the authors.
Edinburgh University Press
22 George Square, Edinburgh
Typeset by Norman Tilley Graphics, Northampton and printed and bound in Great Britain by The Cromwell Press, Trowbridge, Wilts
A CIP record for this book is available
from the British Library
ISBN 0 7486 1019 7
Page v
Contents
Acknowledgements
vii
Contributors
ix
1 Introduction: Impartiality, Neutrality and Justice
Paul Kelly
1
2 From Contracts to Pluralism?
Albert Weale
9
3 Rational, Fair and Reasonable
Jonathan Wolff
35
4 Taking Utilitarianism Seriously
Paul Kelly
44
5 The Priority of the Right Over the Good Rides Again
Richard Arneson
60
6 Impartiality and Liberal Neutrality
Simon Caney
87
7 What's 'Wrong' in Contractualism?
Matt Matravers
108
8 Mutual Advantage and Impartiality
David Gauthier
120
9 Reasonable Agreement: Political not Normative
Russell Hardin
137
10 Care, Justice and the Good
Diemut Bubeck
154

Page vi
11 Some Mistakes About Impartiality
Susan Mendus
176
12 Something in the Disputation not Unpleasant
Brian Barry
186
Index
258

Page vii
Acknowledgements
The original idea for this book developed out of a conversation over a few glasses of whisky in a hotel room in Tokyo, between Fred Rosen, Roger Crisp and myself. I had already initiated a symposium and special issue of the journal Utilitas, on Brian Barry's Justice as Impartiality, and Fred and Roger encouraged the idea that this might be expanded into a book by adding additional chapters. I am grateful to Fred and Roger for that initial encouragement, whether they remember it or not.
At the time of initiating this project I was a lecturer in Swansea; I have since moved to LSE and become a colleague of Brian's. My return to LSE almost coincided with his premature departure as he suffered a major accident in the summer of my arrival. Despite this considerable inconvenience he managed to find the time to respond to the papers for the original symposium and has co-operated with this book since its inception. Without his co-operation this project could not have come to fruition. Editing a work of this kind can sometimes become a substitute for the real intellectual effort of writing a book of one's own. That the work on this book has been more than unusually demanding is to a great measure to the credit of Brian who forced me to think hard about the issues discussed and not merely about editorial consistency. It has been both a pleasure and a challenge to work with him, both on this book and teaching political theory at LSE and I have enjoyed that challenge and benefited immeasurably from it. I am also grateful to Annie Parker, for her hospitality and her work preparing the final essay. Her contribution to this book may be imperceptible, but it is considerable for all that.
I also owe a considerable debt of gratitude to all the contributors to this book and the original Utilitas symposium. I would especially like to thank John Horton and Andrew Mason. I would also like to thank John Charvet. Professor David Gauthier was unable to attend the original Utilitas symposium, but gave his paper at a special seminar at LSE with Professor Barry in March 1997. I would like to thank Dr Matt Mulford for hosting that seminar.
Page viii
I would like to thank Edinburgh University Press for permission to reproduce four of the original Utilitas papers for this book. I would also like to thank Nicola Carr my editor, for her patience, support and encouragement from the beginning when I raised the possibility of expanding the Utilitas special issue. Susan Mendus's paper first appeared in Political Studies; I am grateful to the editor and to the publisher Basil Blackwell for permission to reproduce the essay. A version of Richard Arneson's paper will also appear in
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