Cranston argued that scarcity makes universal welfare rights impossible. After showing that this argument cannot be avoided by denying scarcity, I consider four challenges to the argument which accept the possibility of conflicts between the duties implied by rights. The first denies the agglomeration principle; the second embraces conflicts of duties; the third affirms the violability of all rights-based duties; and the fourth denies that duties to compensate are overriding. I argue that all four challenges to the scarcity argument are unsuccessful. I then discuss Eddy’s recent challenge, which makes welfare rights context dependent, but I argue that this also fails because it makes rights unknowable. I conclude that the scarcity argument,...
Imperfect rights are not held against any single person, and when violated, they do not ground a cla...
I investigate the semantic and practical complexity of social rights, together with the obligations ...
In a world where the private protection of property is costly, government redistribution can lead to...
This paper considers theoretically the relationship between what rights people may be said to have, ...
This paper considers theoretically the relationship between what rights people may be said to have t...
Justifications for the welfare state in general, and for social protection in particular, have come ...
Welfare to work programmes aim to assist the long-term unemployed in finding work; increasing labour...
Proponents of work-based welfare reform claim that moving the poor from welfare to work will advance...
In Are Equal Liberty and Equality Compatible?, Jan Narveson and James Sterba insightfully debate whe...
Somewhere between welfare to work policy and the jurisprudential analysis of rights and duties lies ...
Justifications for the welfare state in general, and for social protection in particular, have come ...
Two notions concerning the relation of rights to utilitarianism seem widely accepted, by both utilit...
A standard objection to socioeconomic human rights is that they are not claimable as human rights: t...
This thesis is concerned with rights-based justifications for redistribution. Orthodox views are cri...
Two widely endorsed moral principles – sufficiency and reciprocity – lie at the core of existing sys...
Imperfect rights are not held against any single person, and when violated, they do not ground a cla...
I investigate the semantic and practical complexity of social rights, together with the obligations ...
In a world where the private protection of property is costly, government redistribution can lead to...
This paper considers theoretically the relationship between what rights people may be said to have, ...
This paper considers theoretically the relationship between what rights people may be said to have t...
Justifications for the welfare state in general, and for social protection in particular, have come ...
Welfare to work programmes aim to assist the long-term unemployed in finding work; increasing labour...
Proponents of work-based welfare reform claim that moving the poor from welfare to work will advance...
In Are Equal Liberty and Equality Compatible?, Jan Narveson and James Sterba insightfully debate whe...
Somewhere between welfare to work policy and the jurisprudential analysis of rights and duties lies ...
Justifications for the welfare state in general, and for social protection in particular, have come ...
Two notions concerning the relation of rights to utilitarianism seem widely accepted, by both utilit...
A standard objection to socioeconomic human rights is that they are not claimable as human rights: t...
This thesis is concerned with rights-based justifications for redistribution. Orthodox views are cri...
Two widely endorsed moral principles – sufficiency and reciprocity – lie at the core of existing sys...
Imperfect rights are not held against any single person, and when violated, they do not ground a cla...
I investigate the semantic and practical complexity of social rights, together with the obligations ...
In a world where the private protection of property is costly, government redistribution can lead to...