Disability through the lens of justice / Jessica Begon.

In Disability through the Lens of Justice, Jessica Begon considers how disabled individuals should be justly treated in the public policy of liberal democratic states. She seeks to create an account of disability which takes seriously the diversity of disabled lives, an approach that enables individ...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Begon, Jessica (Author)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, Incorporated, [2023]
Series:New topics in applied philosophy.
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Online Access:Click for online access
Description
Summary:In Disability through the Lens of Justice, Jessica Begon considers how disabled individuals should be justly treated in the public policy of liberal democratic states. She seeks to create an account of disability which takes seriously the diversity of disabled lives, an approach that enables individuals to exercise broadly-specified opportunities.
When thinking about disability in the context of justice, our focus should not be on the ways in which people's bodies and minds function differently. Instead, we should shift our focus to the limitations that this leads to - for particular people, in particular contexts. And, at least from the perspective of justice, only a subset of these limitations matter. Specifically, those that prevent individuals from having control in certain domains of their life, by restricting the availability of acceptable options or the ability to choose between them. Our theory of justice should be concerned with the lives individuals can lead, and not with whether their bodies and minds function typically. What matters is that people can be mobile, form relationships, engage in leisure, and so on - not how they achieve these things. The problem that disability raises is not the mere fact of difference, but the ways in which that difference is accommodated (or not) and the limitations it may cause. Indeed, on my definition of disability, to be disabled just is to be unable to exercise the control over our life that everyone should be able to. Our focus, then, should not be on whether someone has received a particular diagnosis, or on the most visible deviations from what we take to be the species norm, but on whether people have access to central capabilities. Achieving justice does not require 'normalisation', or the elimination of difference, but enabling all individuals to control their lives as they choose.
Physical Description:1 online resource (239 p.).
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9780191987519
0191987514
9780198875628
0198875622
0198875630
9780198875635
Source of Description, Etc. Note:Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on June 01, 2023).