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Book No. – 001 (Political Science)
Book Name – An Introduction to Political Theory (OP Gauba)
What’s Inside the Chapter? (After Subscription)
1. IDEA OF JUSTICE
1.1. SPHERE OF APPLICATION
1.2. PHILOSOPHICAL CONTEXT
1.3. JUSTICE AS A DYNAMIC IDEA
2. RELATION BETWEEN LIBERTY, EQUALITY AND JUSTICE
3. CLASSICAL THEORIES OF JUSTICE
3.1. PLATO’S THEORY OF JUSTICE
3.2. ARISTOTLE’S THEORY OF JUSTICE
4. MODERN VIEW OF JUSTICE
5. DIMENSIONS OF JUSTICE
5.1. LEGAL JUSTICE
5.2. POLITICAL JUSTICE
5.3. SOCIO-ECONOMIC JUSTICE
6. PROCEDURAL JUSTICE AND SUBSTANTIVE JUSTICE
7. RETRIBUTIVE AND DISTRIBUTIVE JUSTICE
7.1. CONCLUSION
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LANGUAGE
CONCEPT OF JUSTICE
Chapter – 19

Table of Contents
IDEA OF JUSTICE
SPHERE OF APPLICATION
- Political thinkers have long attempted to define the concept of justice.
- With the rise of democracy and socialism, the concept of justice has transformed into social justice.
- The contemporary problem of justice concerns the logical criteria for the allocation of goods, services, opportunities, benefits, power, honours, and obligations, especially in a situation of scarcity.
- The quest for justice involves the just allocation of both benefits and burdens.
- Justice is primarily a moral philosophy issue, but also a political philosophy problem, as it must be implemented by a political order.
- The search for justice is not relevant in:
- Authoritarian systems, where allocation is based on the dictates of an established authority.
- Competitive systems, where allocation is determined by the market forces.
- Communist systems, where the rule of allocation according to need is assumed, thus eliminating the problem of justice.
- The search for justice is relevant only in an open society in a scarcity situation, where there is a demand for social advantages that are in short supply.
- Criteria of allocation must be determined in a way that is acceptable to all individuals or categories concerned.
- No final word can be given on justice, and systems should provide channels of appeal and protest to revise the criteria when needed.
- Authoritarian system: A system where everything conforms to an established order, regulated by a recognized authority.
- Open society: A society where there is freedom to criticize the existing order and reform or reformulate institutions by gaining public support for proposed changes.
PHILOSOPHICAL CONTEXT
- Justice is primarily about discovering the ‘right’ course of action, which requires distinguishing between right and wrong.
- The distinction between right and wrong is different from the distinction between good and evil.
- Good is akin to useful, profitable, or beneficial, while bad or evil implies harmful or damaging.
- Good and bad do not fall into absolute categories; something may be partly good and partly bad.
- Good and bad form a continuum, where they can be located anywhere on a scale between the two extremes.
- Right and wrong are absolute categories; something can only be either right or wrong, similar to true and false.
- Right and wrong are mutually exclusive categories; if something is partly right, it is considered wrong.
- Continuum represents a range of variables between two opposites, allowing easy access from one extreme to another.
- Dichotomy rules out any possibility of middle ground between two conflicting positions, like the two banks of a river with no connection.
- Good and bad are marked by quantitative differences, while right and wrong are marked by qualitative differences.
- Good and bad can be measured and quantified; right and wrong cannot.
- Utilitarianism, founded by Jeremy Bentham, deals with good and bad by balancing pleasure and pain in the felicific calculus.
- Utilitarianism does not focus on justice, which is why it is indifferent to the problem of justice.
- John Stuart Mill focused on the qualitative differences between pleasures, marking a departure from mainstream utilitarianism.
- Utilitarianism aims for the greatest happiness for the greatest number, but tends to subordinate the individual to the collectivity.
- Mill prioritized the liberty of the individual over the majority’s opinion, moving closer to the concept of justice.
- Mill’s focus on the moral worth of policies, rather than just cost-benefit analysis, contributed to the development of Rawls’s theory of justice.
- Rawls opposed utilitarianism and emphasized the importance of justice over utilitarian principles.