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  1. Rethinking Central Bank Accountability in Uncertain Times.Jacqueline Best - 2016 - Ethics and International Affairs 30 (2):215-232.
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  • Comment on Krouse and McPherson.Richard J. Arneson - 1986 - Ethics 97 (1):139-145.
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  • What is the point of equality.Elizabeth Anderson - 1999 - Ethics 109 (2):287-337.
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  • Distribution and emergency.Jennifer Rubenstein - 2007 - Journal of Political Philosophy 15 (3):296–320.
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  • Downward mobility and Rawlsian justice.Govind Persad - 2018 - Philosophical Studies 175 (2):277-300.
    Technological and societal changes have made downward social and economic mobility a pressing issue in real-world politics. This article argues that a Rawlsian society would not provide any special protection against downward mobility, and would act rightly in declining to provide such protection. Special treatment for the downwardly mobile can be grounded neither in Rawls’s core principles—the basic liberties, fair equality of opportunity, and the difference principle—nor in other aspects of Rawls’s theory. Instead, a Rawlsian society is willing to sacrifice (...)
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  • Debt, Freedom, and Inequality.Alex Gourevitch - 2012 - Philosophical Topics 40 (1):135-151.
    In contemporary society, private debt has substituted for other ways of financing the consumption of basic social goods like housing, education, and medical care. This is at least partially due to increased inequality, which has allowed costs to rise faster than median incomes, as well as due to stagnating public provisions. Debt-financed access to basic goods is problematic because it creates new kinds of unfreedom and undermines the value of the freedoms that the indebted do manage to keep or acquire. (...)
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