Margaret Kohn argues for a reappraisal of early twentieth-century left-republican French political theory, known as ‘solidarism’. Solidarism recognises private property as legitimate, but at the same time argues that the collective nature of economic production gives rise to a claim to social property. It is social property that should underlie the case for social justice and social rights, not the standard liberal claims to individual autonomy. This paper provides an appraisal of Kohn’s recovery of solidarism, taking as its main theme the relation between property and social justice. The paper first offers a typology of four theories of justice (right- and left-libertarianism, luck and relational egalitarianism) and discusses the relation ...
The main goal of this chapter is to explore the relation between intellectual property and social ju...
John Stuart Mill is one of the most influential philosophers and political economists within the his...
Why private property rather than any other system of entitlements? The question is not a new one, an...
Margaret Kohn argues for a reappraisal of early twentieth-century left-republican French political t...
Property rights are central to debates over distributive justice. In this dissertation, I defend thr...
Left-libertarian theories of justice Libertarian theories of justice hold that agents, at least ini...
International audienceThe ongoing interpretation of the debates between Jules Dupuit and the French ...
Drastic inequality in wealth between the rich and poor, and intergenerational injustice are two majo...
Two rival approaches to property rights dominate contemporary political philosophy: Lockean natural ...
Abstract This article challenges some fundamental propositions of property rights theory by revealin...
La propriété intellectuelle peut être justifiée de deux façons opposées : selon la théorie utilitari...
The specificity of Rothbard’s thought consists in his original property theory. A part of the article...
This paper discusses the impact that so-called common goods might have in distributive social regime...
J. Rawls' A Theory of Justice revitalizes the Anglo-Saxon debate on the nature of a just society. Bo...
This paper discusses the question of whether a capability theory of justice (such as that of Martha ...
The main goal of this chapter is to explore the relation between intellectual property and social ju...
John Stuart Mill is one of the most influential philosophers and political economists within the his...
Why private property rather than any other system of entitlements? The question is not a new one, an...
Margaret Kohn argues for a reappraisal of early twentieth-century left-republican French political t...
Property rights are central to debates over distributive justice. In this dissertation, I defend thr...
Left-libertarian theories of justice Libertarian theories of justice hold that agents, at least ini...
International audienceThe ongoing interpretation of the debates between Jules Dupuit and the French ...
Drastic inequality in wealth between the rich and poor, and intergenerational injustice are two majo...
Two rival approaches to property rights dominate contemporary political philosophy: Lockean natural ...
Abstract This article challenges some fundamental propositions of property rights theory by revealin...
La propriété intellectuelle peut être justifiée de deux façons opposées : selon la théorie utilitari...
The specificity of Rothbard’s thought consists in his original property theory. A part of the article...
This paper discusses the impact that so-called common goods might have in distributive social regime...
J. Rawls' A Theory of Justice revitalizes the Anglo-Saxon debate on the nature of a just society. Bo...
This paper discusses the question of whether a capability theory of justice (such as that of Martha ...
The main goal of this chapter is to explore the relation between intellectual property and social ju...
John Stuart Mill is one of the most influential philosophers and political economists within the his...
Why private property rather than any other system of entitlements? The question is not a new one, an...