At a time of increasing fragmentation, growing social tension and global forced migration, solidarity is more than ever an endangered social resource. In this volume, scientists from different disciplines analyze the idea of solidarity, its analytical content as well as practical scope and limits for pluralistic and cosmopolitan societies.
Mục lục
Introduction.- Theoretical Foundations.- Solidarity: From small communities to global societies.- Solidarity as a System of Norms.- Solidarity and Responsibility. Open Societies and the Ethics of Absolute Alterity.- From Civic Virtue to the Informal Sphere. Reorienting Democratic Theories of Solidarity.- Reconcilable Ambiguities? Solidarity from an American Perspective.- Autonomous responsibility within the framework of James Griffin’s concept of personhood.- Anthropological and Political Solidarity in Early Marx.- Beyond the Lockean Limits of Tolerating the Intolerable: What Could Solidarity Offer?.- If solidarity is the answer, what was the question? “Thick” and “thin” solidarity and embedded conceptions
of individual responsibility.- Applications.- Principles of morals, natural law, and politics in dealing with refugees.- Cooperating fairly: Economic Solidarity in Open Societies.- Ethnocentric solidarity.- Solidarity as Response to Di Showing Solidarity as an Ethical Response to Displaced and Weak Personssplacement and Repression.- Migration Policy: What can we learn from Cooperatives?.
Giới thiệu về tác giả
Prof. Dr. Jörg Althammer is an economist and teaches economic ethics and social policy at the Faculty of Economics at the Catholic University of Eichstätt-Ingolstadt.
Prof. Dr. Berhard Neumärker teaches Economic Policy at the Faculty of Economics and Behavioral Sciences at the University of Freiburg. He is Director of the Department of Economic Policy and Constitutional Economic Theory in the faculty.Prof. Dr. Ursula Nothelle-Wildfeuer is a theologian and teaches Christian Social Ethics at the University of Freiburg.