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12 Cards in this Set
- Front
- Back
Social Inclusion |
The ethics of wealth, power, and inequality |
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Labor force participation ratio (LFP) |
- ratio of females to males in the workforce |
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Other measures |
- Gender pay gap - Income share |
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UN Human Rights Declaration |
- states a number of rights that every human should have. - says everybody should teach and promote respect for these rights and freedoms - secure universal and effective recognition |
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Some rights in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights |
- social security and an income base - work and livelihood - rest and leisure - standard of living; special care for mothers and children |
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6 ethical approaches to inclusion |
1. Virtue ethics 2. Religious traditions 3. Duty ethics 4. Utilitarianism 5. Libertarianism 6. Human Rights Philosophy |
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Virtue Ethics |
Human beings have a responsibility to others and must cultivate their own attitudes and virtues to meet those responsibilities |
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Religious traditions |
All three great monotheistic religions have an underpinning of equality and a Golden Rule |
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Duty Ethics |
Ethics is a "categorical imperative" and inclusion is a matter of duty to rational principles |
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Utilitarianism |
Society should maximize the state of well-being of the people "greatest good for greatest number" |
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Libertarianism |
The greatest "moral precept" is liberty and the meaning of life is the freedom to choose one's own life course |
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Human Rights Philosophy |
Every human being on the planet has basic human rights that must be protected by society, including government |