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Contexts of Justice

Autor Burke A Hendrix
en Limba Engleză Hardback – apr 2026
Non-Indigenous citizens of the United States and Canada often argue that it is unfair for Indigenous peoples to have distinctive political and property rights within countries purportedly dedicated to equal treatment. Yet Indigenous nations in the United States and Canada have long made claims for a more contextually rich sense of fairness, and their legal and political successes in these efforts - difficult, uneven, and partial as they has been - have allowed them to continue to exist into the present. Their fairness arguments have thus found traction even in the face of longstanding political animosity. Situated within debates on ideal and non-ideal theory, this book begins from arguments of this kind, and seeks to show why they are defensible within a contextually-rich theory of political fairness for Indigenous peoples in the United States and Canada. Structured to be accessible to political theorists and their students with little background in Indigenous politics, the book argues that this broader conception of fairness applies in relation to political sovereignty, ownership rights, cultural choices, and - uncomfortably - racially-inflected standards of tribal membership. Seeking to outline parameters for potential future political orders, it argues that such a contextually-rich standard of fairness is likely to be required long into the future as well, given the unavoidably variegated texture of human social order.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780198961000
ISBN-10: 0198961006
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 167 x 244 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.52 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Notă biografică

Burke Hendrix is Professor of Political Science at the University of Oregon. His research focuses on political theory and Indigenous politics in the United States and Canada, with interests in historical injustice, political territoriality, property ownership, and cultural difference. He is the author of Strategies of Justice: Aboriginal Peoples, Persistent Injustice, and the Ethics of Political Action (OUP, 2019).