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Liberty and Justice

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Title: Liberty and Justice


1
Liberty and Justice
  • Weeks 4 and 5
  • Objective - to put concepts into our workplace

2
Limits to Liberty
  • Buchanan
  • Read for perspective on modern theories of
    economic justice

3
From the Internet
  • A cloistered religious community is forced, over
    time, to negotiate with society at large, for
    exemptions on family allowance, taxation and
    health care.

4
From the Internet
  • Parents who want to send their children to a
    religious school want to support a candidate for
    provincial government who will support tax
    credits and vouchers for children who wish
    alternate schooling. This candidate is also a
    strong proponent of capital punishment, to which
    they are adamantly opposed.

5
From the Internet
  • A mother has a problem when she applies to coach
    a little league team but can't take the job
    unless she first agrees to do something she
    considers an invasion of her privacy submit to
    fingerprinting to prove she has no criminal
    record.
  • Striking compromises

6
From the Internet
  • A political candidate has a problem when she
    finds that running a campaign, holding office,
    and effecting change demand compromises she would
    rather not make, with people with whom she would
    rather not ally herself.
  • Striking compromises

7
Objectivism
  • Ayn Rand the Virtue of Selfishness
  • Her philosophy of Objectivism rejects the ethics
    of self-sacrifice and renunciation. She urged men
    to hold themselves and their lives as their
    highest values, and to live by the code of the
    free individual self-reliance, integrity,
    rationality, productive effort.

8
American Dream...
  • Thomas Jefferson
  • "We must have continually present in our minds
    the difference between independence and liberty.
    Liberty is a right of doing whatever the laws
    permit, and if a citizen could do what they
    forbid he would be no longer possessed of
    liberty, because all his fellow citizens would
    have the same power."

9
But...
  • Who makes the laws?
  • Why?
  • Example of harm reduction in drug injection
    sites
  • Example of prohibition in North America
  • Example of smoking patterns

10
Limits to Liberty
  • Usually we are presented with a natural human
    emotion to improve in the face of calm and
    maintain in the face of adversity
  • improve what
  • maintain what
  • prevent what
  • what are the meanings of conservative,
    liberal, socialist, left, right?

11
Plans, policies, actions
  • Plans are specific to projects to obtain
    objectives
  • They involve specific actions

12
Plans, policies, actions
  • Policies are meta-plans
  • They involve developing criteria for actions
    given certain pre-conditions
  • objective is know, pre-conditions are supposed
  • laws and regulations are enactments of policies,
    specific constraints

13
Making Decisions
  • The word "teleology" is derived from the Greek
    word "telos" that means "ends." In this theory,
    you would consider the ends, or the outcomes of
    decisions. Since this theory is concerned about
    the consequences of the decision, it is also
    referred to as consequentialist. One of the most
    common branches of this theory is utilitarianism,
    which was discussed by Jeremy Bentham and John
    Stuart Mill in the 19th century. A utilitarian
    considers an act right if it is useful in
    bringing about the best consequences overall.
    This theory can be utilized in decision-making by
    first identifying alternative choices. Next you
    would predict which alternative would bring about
    the best possible consequence for the situation
    and choose that one. Remember, in this theory
    "the means justify the ends."

14
Decisions, continued
  • The word "deonto" means "duty" in Greek. A person
    using a deontological theory would consider the
    basic duties and rights of individuals or groups
    and act in accordance with those guidelines. You
    would make a decision based on what you consider
    your moral obligations or duties. Your action
    will be guided by a set of moral principles or
    rules. The work of the philosopher Immanuel Kant
    who lived in the 18th century is used in
    reference to deontology because he believed that
    every person has an inherent dignity and is
    entitled to respect. In one of his categorical
    imperatives, Kant says that we must not treat
    others exclusively as a means to our ends.

15
Ethical Theories
  • Ethical Relativism
  • Ethical Egoism
  • Utilitarian theories
  • Deontological theories
  • Virtue ethics
  • Communitarianism

16
Think of being unfairly treated at work
  • Suppose you were treated rudely or
    disrespectfully?
  • Suppose you are up for a promotion / raise / job,
    and dont get it when you thought you should
    have?
  • Why is it unfair? How would you know?
  • How would you react? Would you take action? Why
    or why not?

17
Justice
  • You should be able to
  • State why managing perceptions of justice is
    important to organizations
  • Distinguish between three different elements of
    justice perceptions
  • List factors that influence perceptions of justice

18
Justice Perceptions are important
  • Justice Perceptions employee judgments about
    whether their work situation is fair
  • Justice Perceptions in organizations have been
    found to be related to
  • Job Satisfaction
  • Organizational Commitment
  • Job Performance
  • Withdrawal Behaviors
  • Counterproductive behaviors
  • Self-perceptions

19
Types of Justice Perceptions
  • Distributive Justice perceptions of the fairness
    of a particular outcome
  • Procedural Justice perceptions of whether the
    process used to make the decision was fair
  • Interactional Justice perceptions of whether
    organizational agents implement procedures
    fairly, by treating people respectfully and
    explaining decisions adequately

20
Distributive Justice
  • Rules for allocating resources
  • Equity resources are distributed to employees
    with respect to their abilities or contributions
  • Equality resources are distributed so each
    person gets the same outcome, regardless of their
    contributions
  • Need resources are distributed to the person
    who needs them more

21
Distributive Justice Equity Theory
  • Employees compute a ratio of how much they
    contribute to the organization and how much they
    get back from the company
  • Employees choose a coworker and computes their
    ratio
  • Employees then compare ratios, and react on the
    basis of this comparison. Unbalanced ratios
    create equity distress, which lead to a variety
    of responses including changes in work effort or
    quality

22
Procedural Justice
  • What are some things that lead to a procedure
    being seen as fair?
  • Voice getting a say in things
  • Consistency
  • Bias Suppression
  • Accuracy
  • Correctability
  • Ethicality

23
When is Procedural Justice Most Important?
Favorable
High Procedural Justice
Reactions to Org.
Low Procedural Justice
Unfavorable
Low
High
Outcome Favorability
24
Interactional Justice
  • Interpersonal component treating people with
    dignity and respect refraining from improper
    remarks or comments
  • Informational component providing adequate
    explanations for decisions

25
Actual Example
  • Two plants in the same company announced 15 pay
    cuts for their workers
  • One plant given extensive explanations remorse
    was shown in the announcement
  • Second plant given a short explanation, but
    without remorse or apology
  • Measured missing inventory ? theft
  • Theft increased in both plants, but more so in
    the second plant (inadequate explanation)

26
Improving Fairness Perceptions
  • Change how fair the situation actually is
  • Improve distributive justice
  • Improve procedural justice
  • Treat employees with sincerity and respect
  • Change how fair the situation is perceived
  • How to explain decisions and procedures to
    employees so they understand?

27
Summary
  • Employee perceptions of justice can impact
    important organizational outcomes, as well as
    employee feelings and attitudes
  • Types of justice include Distributive,
    Procedural, and Interactional
  • Justice perceptions can be altered by actually
    changing the justice of a situation, or by
    providing adequate explanations for
    organizational events

28
But is it right?
  • Aquinas distinguishes between two types of
    justice -- commutative and distributive. Each
    type involves a distinct measure of equality.
    Commutative justice is the right order between
    two individuals in matters of exchange. Its
    measure is strict or simple equality.
    Distributive justice is the relationship of the
    individual to the community, or part to whole.
    Distributive justice involves a proportionate
    equality. It involves a sense of merit -- those
    who more deserving should receive a greater share
    of benefit, honor, or burden from the community.

29
Rawls Social Justice
  • Rawls resurrects contract theory as a basis for
    evaluating states more accurately, for
    evaluating the basic structure of society, i.e.
    its economic as well as legal and political
    structure, and specifically for evaluating it
    from the point of view of the goodness or badness
    of the distribution of benefits and burdens
    between people, i.e. from the point of view of
    what he calls justice.

30
Rawls Social Justice
  • He asks us to imagine ourselves as contracting to
    form a social structure from an original
    position (OP). Here we are behind a veil of
    ignorance, i.e. none of us knows what role he or
    she we will end up by occupying in the social
    structure. In fact no-one knows anything about
    him/herself which will enable him to predict what
    role he/she will end up by occupying a persons
    abilities, industriousness, physical healthiness
    and so on are all behind the veil of ignorance. A
    social structure is more just than another one,
    according to Rawls, if in the OP people would
    form a contract to establish and inhabit that
    social structure rather than the other.

31
Rawls Social Justice
  • Behind the OP people do not know their own
    conception of the good, their own idea of what
    is worth pursuing in life. So Rawls argues that
    they must use a general theory of the good, an
    account of what is good for people in general.
    His thin theory of the good is that what is
    good is what is useful to any person no matter
    what their particular conception of the good. He
    uses this to generate a list of primary goods
    rights, liberties, opportunities, powers, income,
    wealth, sense of ones own worth.
  • The OP could be used directly to generate
    judgments about whether one social structure is
    more just than another (e.g. Canada with or
    without a particular law). But Rawls uses it to
    generate principles which in turn can be used to
    generate such individual judgements.

32
Rawls Social Justice
  • These are the principles of justice
  • (1) Principle of equal liberty Give each person
    an equal right to the most extensive total system
    of the basic liberties (freedom of speech,
    assembly, right to vote, run for elections etc.)
    compatible with an equal system for all.
  • (2) Distribute economic and social advantages
    (income, wealth, status) so that they are
  • (2a) attached to positions which are open to all
    under fair equality of opportunity (fair
    equality of opportunity principle)
  • (2b) to the greatest advantage of the least
    advantaged (the difference principle)

33
Rawls Social Justice
  • Rawls assumes that the parties in the OP will
    adopt a maximin or disaster avoidance form of
    rationality, i.e. if they have to choose between
    several options in each of which there are
    various different chances of different outcomes
    for them, they will not choose the option under
    which the average utility of those outcomes
    (weighted by the chance of each) is highest, but
    the option for which the worst outcome is better
    than for any other
  • option. However it has been argued that a
    rational self-interested person would not adopt a
    maximin policy.
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