Feminist Ethics and Social Policy

Front Cover
Patrice DiQuinzio, Iris Marion Young
Indiana University Press, Aug 22, 1997 - Philosophy - 302 pages

Much work in feminist ethics has been rather abstract. The editors of this work believe that the time has come to assess the potential contribution of feminist ethical theory to the evaluation of specific social policies. If feminist ethics has indeed mobilized important paradigm shifts in normative analysis, then this should enable creative ways of reflection on social policy. Feminist ethics criticizes the gender blindness and biases in much traditional ethical theory, and develops new theories and concepts that are more gender sensitive. Feminist ethics also works to conceptualize issues of right action, social justice, and the human good from out of the specifically gendered experience of diverse groups of women. Feminist ethics has no single set of questions or propositions, but includes a variety of approaches as demonstrated by these essays—some operate within a liberal framework of equality, freedom, justice, and rights, while others are more critical of mainstream liberal versions of these concepts.

 

Contents

The Family and Medical Leave
1
The Combat Exclusion and
77
Fathers Rights Mothers Wrongs?
95
Does Comparable Worth Have Radical Potential?
125
The Case for Preemptive SelfDefense
159
Mixed Black and White Race and Public Policy
173
Agency and Alliance in Public
186
An Uncivil Liberty?
226
A Relational Approach
274
Contributors
291
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