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The Problem of Poverty (MANCEPT)

Dates:4 May 2023
Times:16:00 - 17:30
What is it:Seminar
Organiser:School of Social Sciences
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  • In category "Seminar"
  • In group "(SoSS) Politics"
  • In group "Politics - Research seminars"
  • By School of Social Sciences

Dennis Pirdzuns (University of Manchester Abstract: Poverty is an obvious moral and political problem. An exceptional unanimity prevails in the theoretical literature that poverty is morally bad and deeply unjust. But curiously, little attention has yet been paid specifically to the problem of poverty. This left disagreements to endure on how poverty is properly defined and what kind of just demands arise from it. The following text shall provide greater clarity for understanding poverty as a unique distributive problem raising morally urgent demands. In a first step, conceptual analysis identifies a necessary condition for the definition of poverty. The conclusion is that poverty’s distributive dimension implies a form of deprivation that is independent of the overall distribution of goods. This bears on the differences between absolutist and relativist understandings of poverty as well as the specific implications the Levelling-Down objection has for determining poverty. In a second step, normative theorising identifies a sufficient condition for establishing the just demands of poverty, namely the absolute priority of distributing goods towards those suffering from deprivation. This requires to differentiate between poverty and freedom from poverty, something several distributive principles are incapable of doing. This section also covers the irrelevance of responsibility for poverty as well as the right conceptualisation of distributive priority. The central conclusion is that the notion of ‘less than enough’ is both a necessary condition for the definition and a sufficient condition for the just demands of poverty. And while equality, utility and priority principles fail to accommodate this notion, sufficiency principles are well-placed to do so.

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