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classic highlights
Equality of what?
Well-being is
not just a question of the wealth or pleasure that a person has; it
is a question of how people manage to live their lives and the ability
they have to do certain things that are important to them. This was
the argument put forward by Professor Amartya Sen in 1979.
In his seminal Tanner Lecture - 'Equality of What?', Sen unites
economics and philosophy to explore how a person's well-being might
best be measured. It was the first in a series of writings in which
he developed his capability approach. This focuses on the actual capability
and freedom people have to live the kind of life they value. The capability
approach has since become a main (inter-disciplinary) alternative to
the standard economic frameworks for analysing inequality.
Sen examines and
critiques three traditional approaches to equality: utilitarian equality,
total utility equality and Rawlsian equality. These relate well-being
to either wealth (income or possessions), utility (pleasure, getting
what you want) or access to primary social goods (basic liberties and
basic goods). Sen shows that each of these approaches has shortcomings;
even a combination of the three fails to provide an adequate framework
for understanding individual advantage.
Sen builds on and
goes beyond Rawl's theory of justice, with its focus on primary social
goods. The Rawlsian approach, he argues, fails to recognise the fundamental
differences between human beings. Sen proposes an alternative framework
for thinking about equality which he calls 'basic capability equality'.
This approach focuses on a person being able to do certain basic things,
such as feed themselves and participate in community life. It concerns
a person's ability to function and achieve.
Key arguments of
this thesis include:
- It is essential
to recognise the diversity among people.
- People's needs
vary depending on a range of factors: for example health, body size,
location, climatic conditions.
- Because people's
needs differ, people will also differ in the use they can make of
certain goods: for example, a disabled person may need certain things
that an able-bodied person does not just to achieve mobility.
- The capability
approach focuses on a person's actual capability to make use of the
goods, services and opportunities available to them.
- Capabilities
depend on people's health (physical and mental) and the circumstances
in which they are living.
- Some capabilities
are universal while others can be culturally specific.
Contributor:
Amartya Sen
Further Information
Shelley Rich
Department of Economics
Harvard University
Littauer 205, North Yard
Cambridge, MA 02138
USA
Tel +1 617 4951871
Fax +1 617 4965942
Email slrich@fas.harvard.edu
id21
Institute of Development Studies
University of Sussex
Brighton, BN1 9RE
Tel +44 (0)1273 877998
Fax +44 (0)1273 621202
Email id21classics@ids.ac.uk
Source(s)
'Equality
of What?', The Tanner Lecture on Human Values, by Amartya Sen, 1979
(PDF)
July 2007
See also
Prof. Amartya Kumar
Sen (1933 - ): A brief biography and further links to his work, from
Wikipedia
Amartya
Sen: An autobiography on the official website of the Nobel Foundation
Amartya
Sen: Information on the Harvard University website
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