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  1. Raz on Authority and Democracy.David Rondel - 2012 - Dialogue 51 (2):211-230.
    ABSTRACT: I argue that Joseph Raz’s service conception of authority cannot convincingly account for the nature and source of democratic authority. It cannot explain why decisions made democratically are more likely to be sound than decisions made non-democratically, and therefore, why democratic decisions might be understood as constituting moral reasons for action and compliance independently of their instrumental dimensions. My argument is that democratic authority cannot be explained completely in terms of the truth or soundness of the outcomes it tends (...)
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  • Plato and the modern American “right”: Agendas, assumptions, and the culture of fear.Paul Ramsey - 2009 - Educational Studies: A Jrnl of the American Educ. Studies Assoc 45 (6):572-588.
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  • The problem of scientific education.Rasoul Nejadmehr - 2017 - Confero: Essays on Education, Philosophy and Politics 5 (1):71-173.
    In this essay, I term the dominant educational paradigm of our time as scientific education and subject it to historical analysis in order to bring its tacit racial, colonial and Eurocentric biases into view. I subsume this cluster of problems under the general heading of “the problem of scientific education”, a problem simultaneously submerged deeply in the invisible background of current education and across its foreground inasmuch as it conditions daily educational practices beyond educators’ awareness. The delicate question to be (...)
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  • Peters and Marshall on the philosophy of the subject.Jim Mackenzie - 1995 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 27 (1):25–40.
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  • Some Ethical Limitations of Privatising and Marketizing Social Care and Social Work Provision in England for Children and Young People.Malcolm Carey - 2019 - Ethics and Social Welfare 13 (3):272-287.
    This article analyses the negative ethical impact of privatisation, alongside the ongoing marketisation of social care and social work provision for children and young people in England. It critically appraises the implications of a market-based formal social care system, which includes the risk-averse and often detached role of social workers within ever more fragmented sectors of care. Analysis begins with a discussion of background policy and context. The tendency towards ‘service user’ objectification and commodification are then detailed, followed by a (...)
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