Contributive justice "emphasizes that justice is achieved not when benefits are received, but rather when there is both the duty and opportunity for everyone to contribute labor and decision-making."
See also
- Consequentialism
- Constitutional economics
- Distributive justice
- Distribution (economics)
- Extended sympathy
- Environmental racism
- Injustice
- Interactional justice
- Justice (economics)
- Redistributive justice
- Restorative justice
- Retributive justice
- Rule According to Higher Law
- Rule of law
- Service recovery paradox
- Teaching for social justice
- Transformative justice
- Utilitarianism
- John Rawls
Notes
- Sangwand, T-Kay (2018). "Preservation is Political: Enacting Contributive Justice and Decolonizing Transnational Archival Collaborations". KULA: Knowledge Creation, Dissemination, and Preservation Studies. 2. University of Victoria Libraries: 10. doi:10.5334/kula.36. Retrieved 26 March 2021.
References
- T-Kay Sangwand, “Preservation is Political: Enacting Contributive Justice and Decolonizing Transnational Archival Collaborations,” KULA: Knowledge Creation, Dissemination, and Preservation Studies 2, 1 (2018), https://doi.org/10.5334/kula.36.
- Paul Gomberg, How to Make Opportunity Equal : Race and Contributive Justice (Blackwell Pub., 2007).
- Jose Antonio Merlo-Vega and Clara M. Chu, “Out of Necessity Comes Unbridled Imagination for Survival: Contributive Justice in Spanish Libraries during Economic Crisis,” Library Trends, 64.2 (Sept. 2015), 299.
Types of justice | |
---|---|
In philosophy | |
Areas | |
Other |