"Luck egalitarianism"--the idea that justice requires correcting disadvantages resulting from brute luck--has gained ground in recent years and is now the main rival to John Rawls's theory of distributive justice. Health, Luck, and Justice is the first attempt to systematically apply luck egalitaria
Health, Luck, and Justice
β Scribed by Shlomi Segall
- Publisher
- Princeton University Press
- Year
- 2009
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 251
- Edition
- Course Book
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
"Luck egalitarianism"--the idea that justice requires correcting disadvantages resulting from brute luck--has gained ground in recent years and is now the main rival to John Rawls's theory of distributive justice. Health, Luck, and Justice is the first attempt to systematically apply luck egalitarianism to the just distribution of health and health care. Challenging Rawlsian approaches to health policy, Shlomi Segall develops an account of just health that is sensitive to considerations of luck and personal responsibility, arguing that people's health and the health care they receive are just only when society works to neutralize the effects of bad luck.
Combining philosophical analysis with a discussion of real-life public health issues, Health, Luck, and Justice addresses key questions: What is owed to patients who are in some way responsible for their own medical conditions? Could inequalities in health and life expectancy be just even when they are solely determined by the "natural lottery" of genes and other such factors? And is it just to allow political borders to affect the quality of health care and the distribution of health? Is it right, on the one hand, to break up national health care systems in multicultural societies? And, on the other hand, should our obligation to curb disparities in health extend beyond the nation-state?
By focusing on the ways health is affected by the moral arbitrariness of luck, Health, Luck, and Justice provides an important new perspective on the ethics of national and international health policy.
β¦ Table of Contents
Contents
Preface
Introduction
1. Justice, Luck, and Equality
Part I. Health Care
2. Responsibility- Insensitive Health Care
3. Ultra- Responsibility- Sensitive Health Care: βAll- Luck Egalitarianismβ
4. Tough Luck? Why Luck Egalitarians Need Not Abandon Reckless Patients
5. Responsibility- Sensitive Universal Health Care
Part II. Health
6. Why Justice in Health?
7. Luck Egalitarian Justice in Health
8. Equality or Priority in Health?
9. Distributing Human Enhancements
Part III. Health without Borders
10. Devolution of Health Care Services
11. Global Justice and National Responsibility for Health
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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