© 2013 Taylor & Francis. One important way in which individuals and groups express their ideas and principles, and present their proposals and demands, is in the language of identity or difference. They argue that what they value and what they deserve are related to their distinctive identities. Working within the framework of a political theory of recognition, I argue in this article that particular cultural communities may have reasonable expectations that their distinctive identities receive public recognition, and that others may therefore have good reasons to give those identities such recognition. To be specific, I contend that there are distinct and complementary ways in which the state and its citizens should respond to identity-r...
Recognition can be understood as a positive acknowledgment or affirmation of a person’s existence, i...
This entry discusses three forms of politics of recognition: politics of universalism, affirmative i...
The article stresses two strong points in the essay by Clayton/Levey: first the emphasis on the symb...
© 2013 Taylor & Francis. One important way in which individuals and groups express their ideas and...
In Identity and Political Theory, Clarissa Hayward and Ron Watson intervene in this debate, theorizi...
The concept of recognition, and its relationship to the way we theorise identity and justice, has em...
© 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. In Equal Recognition, Alan Patten ar...
In their thoughtful and thought-provoking article, Clayton Chin and Geoffrey Brahm Levey argue that ...
I address claims of offence of feelings, religious freedom and language rights, which are all justi...
The author elaborates his proposition concerning the distinction of culturalhistorical and political...
http://dx.doi.org/10.5007/2175-7984.2017v16n35p242 The politics of identity and the idea of recogni...
ABSTRACT This article argues that Axel Honneth’s ethics of recognition offers a robust model for a r...
In the 20 years since the publication of Charles Taylor’s essay on ‘The Politics of Recognition’ (Ta...
The article stresses two strong points in the essay by Chin/Levey: first, the emphasis on the symbol...
"December 2009"Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Faculty of Arts, Dept. of Philosophy, 2010.Biblio...
Recognition can be understood as a positive acknowledgment or affirmation of a person’s existence, i...
This entry discusses three forms of politics of recognition: politics of universalism, affirmative i...
The article stresses two strong points in the essay by Clayton/Levey: first the emphasis on the symb...
© 2013 Taylor & Francis. One important way in which individuals and groups express their ideas and...
In Identity and Political Theory, Clarissa Hayward and Ron Watson intervene in this debate, theorizi...
The concept of recognition, and its relationship to the way we theorise identity and justice, has em...
© 2016 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group. In Equal Recognition, Alan Patten ar...
In their thoughtful and thought-provoking article, Clayton Chin and Geoffrey Brahm Levey argue that ...
I address claims of offence of feelings, religious freedom and language rights, which are all justi...
The author elaborates his proposition concerning the distinction of culturalhistorical and political...
http://dx.doi.org/10.5007/2175-7984.2017v16n35p242 The politics of identity and the idea of recogni...
ABSTRACT This article argues that Axel Honneth’s ethics of recognition offers a robust model for a r...
In the 20 years since the publication of Charles Taylor’s essay on ‘The Politics of Recognition’ (Ta...
The article stresses two strong points in the essay by Chin/Levey: first, the emphasis on the symbol...
"December 2009"Thesis (PhD)--Macquarie University, Faculty of Arts, Dept. of Philosophy, 2010.Biblio...
Recognition can be understood as a positive acknowledgment or affirmation of a person’s existence, i...
This entry discusses three forms of politics of recognition: politics of universalism, affirmative i...
The article stresses two strong points in the essay by Clayton/Levey: first the emphasis on the symb...