Global Poverty and Individual Responsibility
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Lexington Books
Published:16th Jan '09
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This book considers what responsibilities affluent individuals have toward global poverty, given that global poverty is a problem with structural, political causes, and one that generally requires collective action. While philosophers have tended to address responsibility for global poverty in exclusively moral, political, or legal ways, Gosselin examines the intersection of these three approaches, giving a comprehensive look at affluent individuals' relationships to poverty. She thus provides both a survey of existing literature on responsibility for global poverty, as well as a positive proposal for a pluralistic and differentiated account of individual duties based on a person's moral agency, her roles within collective groups (including her occupational and civic roles), and her institutional identities as citizen and consumer. While the agents most responsible for addressing global poverty are collectives like governments and corporations, individuals have various kinds of duties to ensure that relevant groups carry out their collective responsibilities. Gosselin examines three kinds of duties at length, each with its own chapter: beneficence, redress, and institutional justice. Situating each duty in the relevant literature (moral, legal, and political philosophy), she explains how the duty is justified, who are its appropriate duty-bearers, and what actions it requires of individuals. Real-life examples that analyze causes, identify responsible agents, and explain the nature of this responsibility show the applicability of each duty to particular situations of poverty. The final chapter summarizes the many and differentiated duties individuals have based on their moral, institutional, and role identities, which in turn are based on how they are situated with respect to the global poor. A suggested list of particular actions individuals should take is given.
This is a terrific book about affluent individuals' responsibility for addressing global poverty. Gosselin presents three different models of responsibility, each providing a different set of reasoned recommendations. She recognizes that different people will prefer different models but regards the models as complementary rather than mutually exclusive. Gosselin ends the book with her own practical, realistic, and deeply insightful conclusions. The book is philosophically sophisticated, providing a valuable contribution to the scholarship on responsibility. It is also refreshingly crisp, unpretentious, accessible, and briskly paced. It is currently the best available book for introducing students to this important topic. -- Alison M. Jaggar, University of Colorado, Boulder
ISBN: 9780739122907
Dimensions: 239mm x 163mm x 20mm
Weight: 490g
228 pages