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Licensed Unlicensed Requires Authentication Published by De Gruyter Oldenbourg May 13, 2020

Distributive Justice in the Lab: Testing the Binding Role of Agreement

  • Marco Faillo EMAIL logo , Laura Marcon and Pedro Francés-Gómez
From the journal Analyse & Kritik

Abstract

Lorenzo Sacconi and his coauthors have put forward the hypothesis that impartial agreements on distributive rules may generate a conditional preference for conformity. The observable effect of this preference would be compliance with fair distributive rules chosen behind a veil of ignorance, even in the absence of external coercion. This paper uses a Dictator Game with production and taking option to compare two ways in which the device of the veil of ignorance may be thought to generate a motivation for, and compliance with a fair distributive rule: individually-as a thought experiment that should work as a moral cue- and collectively-as an actual process of agreement among subjects. The main result is that actual agreement proves to be necessary for agents to be led towards a fair distributive principle and to generate a significant amount of compliance in absence of external authority. This conclusion vindicates the role of actual agreements in generating motivational power in correspondence with fair distributive rules.

Published Online: 2020-05-13
Published in Print: 2020-05-01

© 2020 by Walter de Gruyter GmbH, Berlin/Boston

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