| Theodora Kostakopoulou - 2001 - 238 pagina’s
...31) addresses the question of immigration from the standpoint of membership in a political community: 'the primary good that we distribute to one another is membership in some human community.' Accordingly, Walzer's defence of the right of a sovereign state or a political community to restrict... | |
| Mary Elsbernd, Reimund Bieringer - 2002 - 252 pagina’s
...Walzer's own words, "The primary good we distribute to one another is membership in some human community. What we do with regard to membership structures all our other distributive choices."41 This foundational nature of membership and of * Michael Walzer, Spheres of Justice: A Defense... | |
| Omar Dahbour - 2003 - 288 pagina’s
...possibly can, sharing it with anyone else.31 be considered is that of membership in a community itself: The primary good that we distribute to one another...obedience and collect taxes, to whom we allocate goods and services.32 Once membership in a nation is settled, individuals may lay claim to the other goods available... | |
| Roland Robertson, Kathleen E. White - 2003 - 512 pagina’s
...traditional identity. The field of contemporary local! national identity According to Michael Walzer, 'the primary good that we distribute to one another is membership in some human community' (1981: 1). Schudson, who quotes him, goes on to ask 'but which human community?' (1994: 21), and then... | |
| S. Alexander Haslam - 2003 - 400 pagina’s
...distributive fairness presupposes such boundaries, Walzer ( 1983) has gone so far as to suggest that "the primary good that we distribute to one another is membership in some human community (p. 31), which subsequently influences our distributive choices. The boundaries of our fairness behaviors... | |
| Simon Frith - 2004 - 456 pagina’s
...traditional identity. The field of contemporary local lnational identity According to Michael Walzer. 'the primary good that we distribute to one another is membership in some human community' (1981: 1). Schudson. who quotes him. goes on to ask 'but which human community?' (1994: 21). and then... | |
| Marc S. Rodriguez - 2004 - 460 pagina’s
...themselves in a very important, indeed constitutive, way through membership in a community.2 As he puts it: "The primary good that we distribute to one another is membership in some human community."3 The destruction of the community, then, entails the destruction of the individual. The... | |
| Stuart Allan - 2005 - 408 pagina’s
...I? Where do I belong? Who are my people with whom I can interact? As Smelser (1981: 281) observed, 'The primary good that we distribute to one another is membership in some human community.' A desire to belong, or membership of society, is one of the fundamental characteristics of humankind.... | |
| Eric J. Mitnick - 2006 - 240 pagina’s
...contemporary understanding of the idea of membership. In the sense in which Walzer invoked the idea, "The primary good that we distribute to one another is membership in some human community."10 What type of good, then, is membership? Plainly, membership is a relational good; membership... | |
| Linda Bosniak - 2008 - 235 pagina’s
...boundaries against strangers is grounded in his broader theory of distributive justice. For Walzer, "[t]he primary good that we distribute to one another is membership" in a national political community, and membership "is a good that can only be distributed by taking people... | |
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