Capabilities, Power, and Institutions: Toward a More Critical Development Ethics

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Penn State Press, Jan 1, 2010 - Political Science - 216 pages

Development economics, political theory, and ethics long carried on their own scholarly dialogues and investigations with almost no interaction among them. Only in the mid-1990s did this situation begin to change, primarily as a result of the pioneering work of an economist, Amartya Sen, and a philosopher who doubled as a classicist and legal scholar, Martha Nussbaum. Sen&’s Development as Freedom (1999) and Nussbaum&’s Women and Human Development (2000) together signaled the emergence of a powerful new paradigm that is commonly known as the &“capabilities approach&” to development ethics. Key to this approach is the recognition that citizens must have basic &“capabilities&” provided most crucially through health care and education if they are to function effectively as agents of economic development. Capabilities can be measured in terms of skills and abilities, opportunities and control over resources, and even moral virtues like the virtue of care and concern for others. The essays in this collection extend, criticize, and reformulate the capabilities approach to better understand the importance of power, especially institutional power.

In addition to the editors, the contributors are Sabina Alkire, David Barkin, Nigel Dower, Shelley Feldman, Des Gasper, Daniel Little, Asunci&ón Lera St. Clair, A. Allan Schmid, Paul B. Thompson, and Thanh-Dam Truong.

 

Contents

Institutions and Urgency
1
1 Instrumental Freedoms and Human Capabilities
18
2 The Missing Squirm Factor in Amartya Sens Capability Approach
33
Distributive Determinants of Capabilities Realization
40
4 Development Ethics Through the Lenses of Caring Gender and Human Security
58
5 A Methodologically PragmatistApproach to Development Ethics
96
6 Social Development Capabilities and theContradictions of Capitalist Development
121
Constructing Alternatives with Indigenous Epistemologies
142
8 Capabilities Consequentialism and Critical Consciousness
163
The Ethical Challenges
171
Contributors
191
Index
197
Back Cover
207
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About the author (2010)

Stephen L. Esquith is Professor of Philosophy and Dean of the Residential College in the Arts and Humanities at Michigan State University.

Fred Gifford is Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Graduate Specialization in Ethics and Development.

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