The Age of Responsibility

luck, choice, and the welfare state

280 pages

English language

Published Nov. 8, 2017

ISBN:
978-0-674-54546-5
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OCLC Number:
959648872

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A novel focus on "personal responsibility" has transformed political thought and public policy in America and Europe. Since the 1970s, responsibility--which once meant the moral duty to help and support others--has come to suggest an obligation to be self-sufficient. This narrow conception of responsibility has guided recent reforms of the welfare state, making key entitlements conditional on good behavior. Drawing on intellectual history, political theory, and moral philosophy, Yascha Mounk shows why the Age of Responsibility is pernicious--and how it might be overcome. Mounk shows that today's focus on individual culpability is both wrong and counterproductive: it distracts us from the larger economic forces determining aggregate outcomes, ignores what we owe our fellow citizens regardless of their choices, and blinds us to other key values, such as the desire to live in a society of equals. Recognizing that even society's neediest members seek to exercise genuine agency, Mounk builds a …

1 edition

Subjects

  • Welfare economics
  • Responsibility
  • Social aspects
  • Political aspects
  • Welfare state
  • Autarchy