Historical Justice, Nationhood and African Americans


Autoria(s): Guertin-Armstrong, Simon
Data(s)

11/03/2016

11/03/2016

2013

Resumo

The intelligibility of historical justice is linked to matters of agency and causation. This article presents an account of historical justice limited to transgenerational collective agents which is immune to the agency and causation problems affecting traditional theories of diachronic justice. The novel theory is applied to the case of African Americans, to whom no reparations for past wrongs have been made up to now. When conceived as a transgenerational collective agent – i.e. as a nation–, the African Americans are shown to be owed reparations by the American polity. These reparations are deemed necessary to the goal of reconciliation and to the establishment of relations of mutual respect, which are construed as preconditions to effective distributive justice, here and now.

Identificador

Guertin-Armstrong, S. (2013). "Historical Justice, Nationhood and African Americans". Ithaque, 12, p.23-51.

http://www.revueithaque.org/fichiers/Ithaque12/Guertin-Armstrong.pdf

http://hdl.handle.net/1866/13243

Idioma(s)

en

Relação

Ithaque; 12

Direitos

Ce texte est publié sous licence Creative Commons : Attribution – Pas d’utilisation commerciale – Partage dans les mêmes conditions 2.5 Canada.

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/2.5/ca/legalcode.fr

Tipo

Article