Property-Owning Democracy and the Circumstances of Politics

Analyse & Kritik 35 (1):255-269 (2013)
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Abstract

The article argues that Rawls’s property-owning democracy should not be understood as a necessary standard of democratic legitimacy. This position contradicts Rawls’s own understanding to some extent, but a rejoinder with elements of political liberalism is possible. He concedes that justice as fairness is a ‘comprehensive liberal doctrine’ and that a well ordered society affirming such a doctrine ‘contradicts reasonable pluralism’. Rawls makes clear that reasonable pluralism in combination with the burdens of judgment lead to rare unanimity in political life and to the necessity of majority and plurality voting procedures

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Francis Cheneval
University of Zürich

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Democratic equality: Rawls's complex egalitarianism.Norman Daniels - 2003 - In Samuel Richard Freeman (ed.), The Cambridge Companion to Rawls. Cambridge University Press. pp. 241--76.
Rawls and Left Criticism.Arthur DiQuattro - 1983 - Political Theory 11 (1):53-78.
A theory of justice: Revised edition.A. J. Walsh - 2001 - Australasian Journal of Philosophy 79 (3):447.

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