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  1. rary Feminist movement emphasizes equality of opportunity, but this actually justifies a sharply inegalitarian system. Socialist Feminists, viewing persons as social by nature, introduce a sense of equality of. respect and treatment that goes beyond the privatized person, formal. rights perspective, Elshtain suggests.

  2. 27. März 2001 · 1. Defining the Concept. 2. Principles of Equality and Justice. 2.1 Formal Equality. 2.2 Proportional Equality. 2.3 Moral Equality. 2.4 Presumption of Equality. 3. Conceptions of Distributive Equality: Equality of What? 3.1 Simple Equality and Objections to Equality in General. 3.2 Libertarianism. 3.3 Utilitarianism. 3.4 Equality of Welfare.

  3. In general, economic inequality is an uneven distribution of something – from incomes, resources, goods and states of being through to people’s opportunities to do things, such as to vote in an election or to take care of a child. Discover More. The Gini-coefficient: How do we measure inequality?

  4. 14. Okt. 2022 · The Idea of Equality. Living reference work entry. First Online: 14 October 2022. pp 1–8. Cite this living reference work entry. Altan Heper. 44 Accesses. Download reference work entry PDF. Introduction. On the term: Equality – Greek isotes, Latin aequitas, aequalita s, French égalite, German Gleicheit.

    • Altan Heper
    • altan.heper@ozyegin.edu.tr
  5. 27. März 2001 · 1. Defining the Concept. 2. Principles of Equality and Justice. 2.1 Formal Equality. 2.2 Proportional Equality. 2.3 Moral Equality. 2.4 Presumption of Equality. 3. Conceptions of Distributive Equality: Equality of What? 3.1 Simple Equality and Objections to Equality in General. 3.2 Libertarianism. 3.3 Utilitarianism. 3.4 Equality of Welfare.

  6. 16. Aug. 2002 · 1. Preliminary Distinctions. 2. Equality of Opportunity. 3. Equality of Condition: Equality of What? 3.1 Lockean Rights. 3.2 Karl Marx on Equal Rights. 3.3 Income and Wealth. 3.4 Capabilities. 3.5 Resources. 3.6 Welfare and Opportunity for Welfare. 3.7 Conclusion: A Test Case. 4. Relational Equality. 5. Equality among Whom? 6.

  7. Two central issues for ethical analysis of equality are: (1) Why equality? (2) Equality of what? The two questions are distinct but thoroughly interdependent.