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justice

 
Dictionary: jus·tice   (jŭs'tĭs) pronunciation
 
Justice

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n.
  1. The quality of being just; fairness.
    1. The principle of moral rightness; equity.
    2. Conformity to moral rightness in action or attitude; righteousness.
    1. The upholding of what is just, especially fair treatment and due reward in accordance with honor, standards, or law.
    2. Law. The administration and procedure of law.
  2. Conformity to truth, fact, or sound reason: The overcharged customer was angry, and with justice.
  3. (Abbr. J.) Law.
    1. A judge.
    2. A justice of the peace.
idiom:

do justice to

  1. To treat adequately, fairly, or with full appreciation: The subject is so complex that I cannot do justice to it in a brief survey.

[Middle English, from Old French, from Latin iūstitia, from iūstus, just. See just1.]


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Thesaurus: justice
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noun

  1. The quality or state of being just and unbiased: detachment, disinterest, disinterestedness, dispassion, dispassionateness, equitableness, fair-mindedness, fairness, impartiality, impartialness, justness, nonpartisanship, objectiveness, objectivity. See fair/unfair.
  2. The state, action, or principle of treating all persons equally in accordance with the law: due process, equity. See right/wrong.
  3. A public official who decides cases brought before a court of law in order to administer justice: judge, jurisprudent, jurist, justice of the peace, magistrate. See decide/hesitate, law.

 
Antonyms: justice
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n

Definition: lawfulness, fairness
Antonyms: illegality, injustice, lawlessness, partiality, unethicalness, unfairness


 
Dental Dictionary: justice
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n

The constant and perpetual disposition to render every person his or her due. Also, the conformity of one’s actions and will to the law.

 
Political Dictionary: justice
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The existence of a proper balance. Justice in law illustrates applications of the notion of a proper balance: a fair trial, which, among other things, achieves a proper balance between the ability of the defendant to establish innocence and the ability of the prosecution to establish guilt; a just sentence (see punishment) which balances the precedent wrong with a present response. In political theory, justice has concerned both the terms of membership of a social group (see social justice) and the distribution of burdens and benefits within that group (see distributive justice). In a legal context, distribution is sometimes contrasted with compensation, with restoring the proper balance which existed before a wrong, and this view informs some theories of punishment. Plato's Republic depicted a just society as one in which various social functions were properly fulfilled and balanced, thus tending to assimilate the virtue of justice with the pursuit of the common good. This assimilation makes justice the cardinal virtue of political order, but is resisted by those, for example, who might wish to consider how just a society is as only one of a number of guides to the desirability of a life within it.

— Andrew Reeve

 

In philosophy, the concept of a proper proportion between a person's deserts (what is merited) and the good and bad things that befall or are allotted to him or her. Aristotle's discussion of the virtue of justice has been the starting point for almost all Western accounts. For him, the key element of justice is treating like cases alike, an idea that has set later thinkers the task of working out which similarities (need, desert, talent) are relevant. Aristotle distinguishes between justice in the distribution of wealth or other goods (distributive justice) and justice in reparation, as, for example, in punishing someone for a wrong he has done (retributive justice). The notion of justice is also essential in that of the just state, a central concept in political philosophy. See also law.

For more information on justice, visit Britannica.com.

 

According to Judaism, justice is an attribute of God, which is tempered by His attribute of Mercy. God, in creating the world, is depicted in Genesis as exercising both justice and mercy in His role as Creator of the Universe. According to the rabbinic interpretation, the Bible refers to God by the name of elohim to connote His role as the ultimate Judge, while it uses the Tetragrammaton to connotesGod's mercy (see God, Names of). Thus, while God commands strict adherence to the laws He has given to humanity, He takes into account human weakness and therefore does not judge merely by the letter of the law, otherwise all individuals would be doomed. The merging of justice and mercy is a constant theme in the Bible and is presented in dramatic form in the dialogues between God and Abraham and between God and Moses. In arguing for the salvation of the inhabitants of the cities of Sodom and Gemorrah (Gen. 18:16-32), Abraham pleads with God to go beyond the letter of the law and to commute the sentence of death and destruction about to be visited on all the inhabitants of the cities, for the sake of a handful, purely hypothetical as it turns out, of righteous people. The Midrash Rabbah, discussing this encounter, notes that absolute justice cannot be applied to the imperfect human world. Similarly, when God wishes to destroy the Jewish people for the sin of the Golden Calf (Ex. 32), Moses prays for Divine mercy and his prayer is answered both explicitly---in God's expressly stated tone of forgiveness---and implicitly, in God's declaration of His attributes.

Jewish liturgy makes frequent references to God's role as ultimate Judge. On weekdays, within the context of the Amidah, which occupies a central position in the prayer book, God is addressed in terms of justice merged with mercy as "the King Who loves charity and justice". Even on the death of close relatives, Jews bless God as the "true Judge." During the High Holidays (Rosh Ha-Shanah, the Day of Atonement, and the intervening Days of Penitence), when, according to Jewish tradition, God sits in judgment over the people of Israel, His role as judge is even further reinforced, and the liturgy is filled with references to God as both King and Judge.

The issue of the nature of Divine justice is essential in Jewish theodicy. As in Psalms 92, Judaism has always asked the question, "Why do the innocent suffer and the wicked prosper?" The traditional Jewish response has been to affirm God's wisdom and fairness, even if the human individual is unable to comprehend the infinite depths of that wisdom. When Job is confronted by misery and sorrow, he questions God's judgment. The Bible does not condemn Job for doing so; rather, he is informed that his human power of reasoning is far too limited to comprehend the intricacies of God's plan (see Reward and Punishment).

At various times in Jewish history, specifically during periods of great distress--- such as the destruction of the First and Second Temples, the Inquisition and the expulsion from Spain and Portugal, the massacres in the Ukraine in 1648-49---serious questions have been raised about Divine justice. The issue of theodicy has been perhaps most painful in recent Jewish history, occasioned by the Holocaust, with the death of six million Jews. (For the varied religious responses, see Holocaust.)

By virtue of the principle of the Imitation of God, it is axiomatic that mankind in general, and the Jew in particular, is expected to live within a framework of justice---tempered by mercy. Moses commanded the people, "Justice, justice shall you pursue" (Deut. 16:20), and this directive is a leitmotif of the prophets and of the rabbis in formulating Jewish law. The same Hebrew root is used for "justice" and "Righteousness" and the thought and practices of the Jewish people have been strongly molded by this concept and the conviction that the world is preserved "by truth, justice, and peace" (Avot 1:18).


 
Law Encyclopedia: Justice
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This entry contains information applicable to United States law only.

The proper administration of the law; the fair and equitable treatment of all individuals under the law. A title given to certain judges, such as federal and state supreme court judges.

 
Fine Arts Dictionary: Justice
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A figure in painting and sculpture that symbolizes the impartiality of true justice. The figure of Justice usually appears as a blindfolded woman with a scale in one hand and a sword in the other.

 
Devil's Dictionary: justice
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A cynical view of the world by Ambrose Bierce


n.

A commodity which is a more or less adulterated condition the State sells to the citizen as a reward for his allegiance, taxes and personal service.


 
Word Tutor: justice
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pronunciation

IN BRIEF: The quality of being fair.

pronunciation The victims of the robbery demanded justice.

 
Quotes About: Justice
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Quotes:

"There is no such thing as justice in the abstract; it is merely a compact between men" - Epicurus

"Justice is a concept. Muscle is the reality." - Linda Blandford

"The injustice done to an individual is sometimes of service to the public." - Junius

"A man's vanity tells him what is honor, a man's conscience what is justice." - Walter Savage Landor

"Justice is better than chivalry if we cannot have both." - Alice Stone Blackwell

"The essence of justice is mercy." - Edwin Hubbel Chapin

See more famous quotes about Justice

 
Wikipedia: Justice
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Lady Justice depicts justice as a goddess equipped with three symbols: a sword symbolizing the court's coercive power; a human scale weighing competing claims in each hand; and a blindfold indicating impartiality.[1]


Justice is the concept of moral rightness based on ethics, rationality, law, natural law, fairness, religion and/or equity.[2]

Contents

Concept of justice

Justice concerns the proper ordering of things and persons within a society. As a concept it has been subject to philosophical, legal, and theological reflection and debate throughout history. A number of important questions surrounding justice have been fiercely debated over the course of western history: What is justice? What does it demand of individuals and societies? What is the proper distribution of wealth and resources in society: equal, meritocratic, according to status, or some other arrangement? There are myriad possible answers to these questions from divergent perspectives on the political and philosophical spectrum.

According to most theories of justice, it is overwhelmingly important: John Rawls, for instance, claims that "Justice is the first virtue of social institutions, as truth is of systems of thought."[3]: Justice can be thought of as distinct from and more fundamental than benevolence, charity, mercy, generosity or compassion. Justice has traditionally been associated with concepts of fate, reincarnation or Divine Providence, i.e. with a life in accordance with the cosmic plan. The association of justice with fairness has thus been historically and culturally rare and is perhaps chiefly a modern innovation.[4]

Studies at UCLA in 2008 have indicated that reactions to fairness are "wired" into the brain and that, "Fairness is activating the same part of the brain that responds to food in rats... This is consistent with the notion that being treated fairly satisfies a basic need" [5]. Research conducted in 2003 at Emory University, Georgia, involving Capuchin Monkeys demonstrated that other cooperative animals also possess such a sense and that "inequality aversion may not be uniquely human."[6] indicating that ideas of fairness and justice may be instinctual in nature.

Variations of justice

Utilitarianism is a form of consequentialism, where punishment is forward-looking. Justified by the ability to achieve future social benefits resulting in crime reduction, the moral worth of an action is determined by its outcome.

Retributive justice regulates proportionate response to crime proven by lawful evidence, so that punishment is justly imposed and considered as morally-correct and fully deserved. The law of retaliation (lex talionis) is a military theory of retributive justice, which says that reciprocity should be equal to the wrong suffered; "life for life, wound for wound, stripe for stripe."[7]

Restorative justice is concerned not so much with retribution and punishment as with (a) making the victim whole and (b) reintegrating the offender into society. This approach frequently brings an offender and a victim together, so that the offender can better understand the effect his/her offense had on the victim.

Distributive justice is directed at the proper allocation of things - wealth, power, reward, respect - between different people.

Oppressive Law exercises an authoritarian approach to legislation which is "totally unrelated to justice", a tyrannical interpretation of law is one in which the population lives under restriction from unlawful legislation.

Some theorists, such as the classical Greeks, conceive of justice as a virtue—a property of people, and only derivatively of their actions and the institutions they create. Others emphasize actions or institutions, and only derivatively the people who bring them about. The source of justice has variously been attributed to harmony, divine command, natural law, or human creation.

Kinds of justice

Justice by Luca Giordano

Justice as harmony

In his dialogue Republic, Plato uses Socrates to argue for justice which covers both the just person and the just City State. Justice is a proper, harmonious relationship between the warring parts of the person or city. Hence Plato's definition of justice is that justice is the having and doing of what is one's own. A just man is a man in just the right place, doing his best and giving the precise equivalent of what he has received. This applies both at the individual level and at the universal level. A person’s soul has three parts – reason, spirit and desire. Similarly, a city has three parts – Socrates uses the parable of the chariot to illustrate his point: a chariot works as a whole because the two horses’ power is directed by the charioteer. Lovers of wisdom – philosophers, in one sense of the term – should rule because only they understand what is good. If one is ill, one goes to a doctor rather than a quack, because the doctor is expert in the subject of health. Similarly, one should trust one’s city to an expert in the subject of the good, not to a mere politician who tries to gain power by giving people what they want, rather than what’s good for them. Socrates uses the parable of the ship to illustrate this point: the unjust city is like a ship in open ocean, crewed by a powerful but drunken captain (the common people), a group of untrustworthy advisors who try to manipulate the captain into giving them power over the ship’s course (the politicians), and a navigator (the philosopher) who is the only one who knows how to get the ship to port. For Socrates, the only way the ship will reach its destination – the good – is if the navigator takes charge.[8]

Justice as divine command

Justice as a divine law is commanding , and indeed the whole of morality, is the authoritative command. Killing is wrong and therefore must be punished and if not punished what should be done? There is a famous paradox called the Euthyphro dilemma which essentially asks: is something right because God commands it, or does God command it because it's right? If the former, then justice is arbitrary; if the latter, then morality exists on a higher order than God, who becomes little more than a passer-on of moral knowledge. Some Divine command advocates respond by pointing out that the dilemma is false: goodness is the very nature of God and is necessarily expressed in His commands.

Justice as natural law

See also: John Locke

Justice as human creation

In contrast to the understandings canvassed so far, justice may be understood as a human creation, rather than a discovery of harmony, divine command, or natural law. This claim can be understood in a number of ways, with the fundamental division being between those who argue that justice is the creation of some humans, and those who argue that it is the creation of all humans.

Justice as authoritative command

Injustice by Giotto di Bondone

According to thinkers including Thomas Hobbes, justice is created by public, enforceable, authoritative rules, and injustice is whatever those rules forbid, regardless of their relation to morality. Justice is created, not merely described or approximated, by the command of an absolute sovereign power. This position has some similarities with divine command theory (see above), with the difference that the state (or other authority) replaces God.

Justice as trickery

In Republic, the character Thrasymachus argues that justice is the interest of the strong—merely a name for what the powerful or cunning ruler has imposed on the people. Nietzsche, in contrast, argues that justice is part of the slave-morality of the weak many, rooted in their resentment of the strong few, and intended to keep the noble man down. In Human, All Too Human he states that, "there is no eternal justice."

Justice as mutual agreement

According to thinkers in the social contract tradition, justice is derived from the mutual agreement of everyone concerned; or, in many versions, from what they would agree to under hypothetical conditions including equality and absence of bias. This account is considered further below, under ‘Justice as fairness’.

Justice as a subordinate value

According to utilitarian thinkers including John Stuart Mill, justice is not as fundamental as we often think. Rather, it is derived from the more basic standard of rightness, consequentialism: what is right is what has the best consequences (usually measured by the total or average welfare caused). So, the proper principles of justice are those which tend to have the best consequences. These rules may turn out to be familiar ones such as keeping contracts; but equally, they may not, depending on the facts about real consequences. Either way, what is important is those consequences, and justice is important, if at all, only as derived from that fundamental standard. Mill tries to explain our mistaken belief that justice is overwhelmingly important by arguing that it derives from two natural human tendencies: our desire to retaliate against those who hurt us, and our ability to put ourselves imaginatively in another’s place. So, when we see someone harmed, we project ourselves into her situation and feel a desire to retaliate on her behalf. If this process is the source of our feelings about justice, that ought to undermine our confidence in them.[9] Utilitarianism.

Theories of distributive justice

Allegory or The Triumph of Justice by Hans von Aachen

Theories of distributive justice need to answer three questions:

  1. What goods are to be distributed? Is it to be wealth, power, respect, some combination of these things?
  2. Between what entities are they to be distributed? Humans (dead, living, future), sentient beings, the members of a single society, nations?
  3. What is the proper distribution? Equal, meritocratic, according to social status, according to need, based on property rights and non-aggression?

Distributive justice theorists generally do not answer questions of who has the right to enforce a particular favored distribution. On the other hand, property rights theorists argue that there is no "favored distribution." Rather, distribution should be based simply on whatever distribution results from non-coerced interactions or transactions (that is, transactions not based upon force or fraud).

This section describes some widely-held theories of distributive justice, and their attempts to answer these questions.

Egalitarianism

According to the egalitarian, goods should be distributed equally. This basic view can be elaborated in many different ways, according to what goods are to be distributed—wealth, respect, opportunity—and what they are to be distributed equally between—individuals, families, nations, races, species. Commonly-held egalitarian positions include demands for equality of opportunity and for equality of outcome.

Giving people what they deserve

In one sense, all theories of distributive justice claim that everyone should get what they deserve. Theories disagree on the basis for deserts. The main distinction is between theories that argue the basis of just deserts is held equally by everyone, and therefore derive egalitarian accounts of distributive justice—and theories that argue the basis of just deserts is unequally distributed on the basis of, for instance, hard work, and therefore derive accounts of distributive justice by which some should have more than others. This section deals with some popular theories of the second type.

According to meritocratic theories, goods, especially wealth and social status, should be distributed to match individual merit, which is usually understood as some combination of talent and hard work. According to needs-based theories, goods, especially such basic goods as food, shelter and medical care, should be distributed to meet individuals' basic needs for them. Marxism can be regarded as a needs-based theory on some readings of Marx's slogan "from each according to his ability, to each according to his need."[10] According to contribution-based theories, goods should be distributed to match an individual's contribution to the overall social good.

Fairness

J.L. Urban, statue of Lady Justice at court building in Olomouc, Czech Republic

In his A Theory of Justice, John Rawls used a social contract argument to show that justice, and especially distributive justice, is a form of fairness: an impartial distribution of goods. Rawls asks us to imagine ourselves behind a veil of ignorance which denies us all knowledge of our personalities, social statuses, moral characters, wealth, talents and life plans, and then asks what theory of justice we would choose to govern our society when the veil is lifted, if we wanted to do the best that we could for ourselves. We don’t know who in particular we are, and therefore can’t bias the decision in our own favour. So, the decision-in-ignorance models fairness, because it excludes selfish bias. Rawls argues that each of us would reject the utilitarian theory of justice that we should maximize welfare (see below) because of the risk that we might turn out to be someone whose own good is sacrificed for greater benefits for others. Instead, we would endorse Rawls’s two principles of justice:

  • Each person is to have an equal right to the most extensive total system of equal basic liberties compatible with a similar system of liberty for all.
  • Social and economic inequalities are to be arranged so that they are both
    • to the greatest benefit of the least advantaged, consistent with the just savings principle, and
    • attached to offices and positions open to all under conditions of fair equality of opportunity.[11]

This imagined choice justifies these principles as the principles of justice for us, because we would agree to them in a fair decision procedure. Rawls’s theory distinguishes two kinds of goods – (1) liberties and (2) social and economic goods, i.e. wealth, income and power – and applies different distributions to them – equality between citizens for (1), equality unless inequality improves the position of the worst off for (2).

Property Rights (non-coercion)/Having the right history

Robert Nozick’s influential critique of Rawls argues that distributive justice is not a matter of the whole distribution matching an ideal pattern, but of each individual entitlement having the right kind of history. It is just that a person has some good (especially, some property right) if and only if they came to have it by a history made up entirely of events of two kinds:

1. Just acquisition, especially by working on unowned things; and
2. Just transfer, that is free gift, sale or other agreement, but not theft (i.e. by force or fraud).

If the chain of events leading up to the person having something meets this criterion, they are entitled to it: that they possess it is just, and what anyone else does or doesn't have or need is irrelevant.

On the basis of this theory of distributive justice, Nozick argues that all attempts to redistribute goods according to an ideal pattern, without the consent of their owners, are theft. In particular, redistributive taxation is theft.

Some property rights theorists also take a consequentialist view of distributive justice and argue that property rights based justice also has the effect of maximizing the overall wealth of an economic system. They explain that voluntary (non-coerced) transactions always have a property called pareto efficiency. A pareto efficient transaction is one in which at least one party ends up better off and neither party ends up worse off. The result is that the world is better off in an absolute sense and no one is worse off. Such consequentialist property rights theorists argue that respecting property rights maximizes the number of pareto efficient transactions in the world and minimized the number of non-pareto efficient transactions in the world (i.e. transactions where someone is made worse off). The result is that the world will have generated the greatest total benefit from the limited, scarce resources available in the world. Further, this will have been accomplished without taking anything away from anyone by coercion.

Welfare-maximization

According to the utilitarian, justice requires the maximization of the total or average welfare across all relevant individuals. This may require sacrifice of some for the good of others, so long as everyone’s good is taken impartially into account. Utilitarianism, in general, argues that the standard of justification for actions, institutions, or the whole world, is impartial welfare consequentialism, and only indirectly, if at all, to do with rights, property, need, or any other non-utilitarian criterion. These other criteria might be indirectly important, to the extent that human welfare involves them. But even then, such demands as human rights would only be elements in the calculation of overall welfare, not uncrossable barriers to action.

Theories of retributive justice

Theories of retributive justice are concerned with punishment for wrongdoing, and need to answer three questions:

  1. why punish?
  2. who should be punished?
  3. what punishment should they receive?

This section considers the two major accounts of retributive justice, and their answers to these questions. Utilitarian theories look forward to the future consequences of punishment, while retributive theories look back to particular acts of wrongdoing, and attempt to balance them with deserved punishment.

Utilitarianism

According to the utilitarian, as already noted, justice requires the maximization of the total or average welfare across all relevant individuals. Punishment is bad treatment of someone, and therefore can’t be good in itself, for the utilitarian. But punishment might be a necessary sacrifice which maximizes the overall good in the long term, in one or more of three ways:

  1. Deterrence. The credible threat of punishment might lead people to make different choices; well-designed threats might lead people to make choices which maximize welfare.
  2. Rehabilitation. Punishment might make bad people into better ones. For the utilitarian, all that ‘bad person’ can mean is ‘person who’s likely to cause bad things (like suffering) ’. So, utilitarianism could recommend punishment that changes someone such that they are less likely to cause bad things.
  3. Security/Incapacitation. Perhaps there are people who are irredeemable causers of bad things. If so, imprisoning them might maximize welfare by limiting their opportunities to cause harm and therefore the benefit lies within protecting society.

So, the reason for punishment is the maximization of welfare, and punishment should be of whomever, and of whatever form and severity, are needed to meet that goal. Worryingly, this may sometimes justify punishing the innocent, or inflicting disproportionately severe punishments, when that will have the best consequences overall (perhaps executing a few suspected shoplifters live on television would be an effective deterrent to shoplifting, for instance). It also suggests that punishment might turn out never to be right, depending on the facts about what actual consequences it has.[12]

Retributivism

The retributivist will think the utilitarian's argument disastrously mistaken. If someone does something wrong, we must respond to it, and to him or her, as an individual, not as a part of a calculation of overall welfare. To do otherwise is to disrespect him or her as an individual human being. If the crime had victims, it is to disrespect them, too. Wrongdoing must be balanced or made good in some way, and so the criminal deserves to be punished. Retributivism emphasizes retribution – payback – rather than maximization of welfare. Like the theory of distributive justice as giving everyone what they deserve (see above), it links justice with desert. It says that all guilty people, and only guilty people, deserve appropriate punishment. This matches some strong intuitions about just punishment: that it should be proportional to the crime, and that it should be of only and all of the guilty. However, it is sometimes argued that retributivism is merely revenge in disguise.[13] Despite this criticism, there are numerous differences between retribution and revenge: the former is impartial, has a scale of appropriateness and corrects a moral wrong, whereas the latter is personal, unlimited in scale, and often corrects a slight.

Institutions

The Justices of the United States Supreme Court with President George W. Bush, October 2005

In a world where people are interconnected but they disagree, institutions are required to instantiate ideals of justice. These institutions may be justified by their approximate instantiation of justice, or they may be deeply unjust when compared with ideal standards — consider the institution of slavery. Justice is an ideal which the world fails to live up to, sometimes despite good intentions, sometimes disastrously. The question of institutive justice raises issues of legitimacy, procedure, codification and interpretation, which are considered by legal theorists and by philosophers of law.

Another definition of justice is an independent investigation of truth. In a court room, lawyers, the judge and the jury are supposed to be independently investigating the truth of an alleged crime. In physics, a group of physicists examine data and theoretical concepts to consult on what might be the truth or reality of a phenomenon.

See also

References

  1. ^ Luban, Law's Blindfold, 23
  2. ^ Journal of Economic Literature, 41(4), p. 1188.
  3. ^ John Rawls, A Theory of Justice (revised edn, Oxford: OUP, 1999), p. 3
  4. ^ Daston, Lorraine (2008). ""Life, Chance and Life Chances"". Daedalus: 5-14. 
  5. ^ Brain reacts to fairness as it does to money and chocolate, study shows / UCLA Newsroom
  6. ^ Nature 425, 297-299 (18 September 2003)
  7. ^ Exodus 21.xxiii-xxv.
  8. ^ Plato, Republic trans. Robin Waterfield (Oxford: OUP, 1984).
  9. ^ John Stuart Mill, Utilitarianism in On Liberty and Other Essays ed. John Gray (Oxford: OUP, 1991), Chapter 5.
  10. ^ Karl Marx, 'Critique of the Gotha Program' in Karl Marx: Selected writings ed. David McLellan (Oxford: OUP, 1977): 564-70, p. 569.
  11. ^ John Rawls, A Theory of Justice (revised edition, Oxford: OUP, 1999), p. 266.
  12. ^ C. L. Ten, ‘Crime and Punishment’ in Peter Singer ed., A Companion to Ethics (Oxford: Blackwell, 1993): 366-72.
  13. ^ Ted Honderich, Punishment: The supposed justifications (London: Hutchinson & Co., 1969), Chapter 1.

Further reading

  • Anthony Duff & David Garland eds, A Reader on Punishment (Oxford: OUP, 1994).
  • Barzilai Gad, Communities and Law: Politics and Cultures of Legal Identities (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2003).
  • Brian Barry, Theories of Justice (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1989).
  • C.L. Ten, Crime, Guilt, and Punishment: A philosophical introduction (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1987).
  • Colin Farrelly, An Introduction to Contemporary Political Theory (London: Sage, 2004).
  • David Gauthier, Morals By Agreement (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1986).
  • James Konow (2003). "Which Is the Fairest One of All? A Positive Analysis of Justice Theories," Journal of Economic Literature, 41(4), pp. 1188-1239.
  • David Schmidtz, Elements of Justice (New York: CUP, 2006).
  • Harry Brighouse, Justice (Cambridge: Polity Press, 2004).
  • John Rawls, A Theory of Justice (revised edition, Oxford: OUP, 1999).
  • John Stuart Mill, Utilitarianism in On Liberty and Other Essays ed. John Gray (Oxford: OUP, 1991).
  • Nicola Lacey, State Punishment (London: Routledge, 1988).
  • Peter Singer ed., A Companion to Ethics (Oxford: Blackwell, 1993), Part IV.
  • Plato, Republic trans. Robin Waterfield (Oxford: OUP, 1994).
  • Robert E. Goodin & Philip Pettit eds, Contemporary Political Philosophy: An anthology (2nd edition, Malden Mass.: Blackwell, 2006), Part III.
  • Robert Nozick, Anarchy, State, and Utopia (Oxford: Blackwell, 1974).
  • Ted Honderich, Punishment: The supposed justifications (London: Hutchinson & Co., 1969).
  • Will Kymlicka, Contemporary Political Philosophy: An introduction (2nd edition, Oxford: OUP, 2002).

External links



 
Translations: Justice
Top

Dansk (Danish)
n. - retfærdighed, ret, berettigelse, rimelighed, det berettigede i, dommer

idioms:

  • bring to justice    retsforfølge, tiltale, anklage, drage til ansvar
  • do justice    udøve ret og skel
  • do justice to    udøve fuld retfærdighed
  • do oneself justice    vise hvad man dur til, udnytte sine evner fuldt ud
  • Justice of the Peace    fredsdommer
  • rough justice    barske realiteter

Nederlands (Dutch)
rechtvaardigheid, eerlijkheid, rechtspraak, rechterlijke macht, rechter, recht

Français (French)
n. - (Jur) justice, équité, juste, (faire) honneur, (GB) juge, (US) juge de la Cour Suprême, justice (d'une cause), bien-fondé de (d'une cause)

idioms:

  • bring to justice    traduire en justice
  • do justice    être juste, faire honneur à
  • do justice to    être juste envers, rendre justice à
  • do oneself justice    se monter sous son meilleur jour, se mettre en valeur
  • do someone justice    flatter/avantager qn
  • in justice to    pour être juste envers
  • Justice of the Peace    juge de paix
  • rough justice    justice sévère

Deutsch (German)
n. - Gerechtigkeit, Richter, Justiz, Recht

idioms:

  • bring to justice    jmdn. vor Gericht stellen
  • do justice    einer Sache gerecht werden
  • do justice to    einer Sache gerecht werden
  • do oneself justice    sich richtig zur Geltung bringen
  • do someone justice    jmdm. Recht widerfahren lassen
  • in justice to    um jmdm. gerecht zu werden
  • Justice of the Peace    Friedensrichter
  • rough justice    unfaire Behandlung

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - δικαιοσύνη, δίκαιο, δικαστής του Ανώτατου Δικαστηρίου

idioms:

  • bring to justice    παραπέμπω στη δικαιοσύνη
  • do justice    βγάζω ασπροπρόσωπο, δικαιώνω, τιμώ δεόντως (φαγητό)
  • do justice to    βγάζω ασπροπρόσωπο, δικαιώνω, τιμώ δεόντως (φαγητό)
  • do oneself justice    επιβάλλομαι
  • Justice of the Peace    (νομ.) ειρηνοδίκης, πταισματοδίκης
  • rough justice    υπερβολικά σκληρή τιμωρία

Italiano (Italian)
giudice, giustizia

idioms:

  • bring to justice    punire legalmente
  • do justice    fare giustizia
  • do justice to oneself    render giustizia
  • do oneself justice    farsi onore
  • Justice of the Peace    giudice di pace
  • rough justice    punizione dura, verdetto ingiusto

Português (Portuguese)
n. - justiça (f), juiz (m), magistrado (m) (Jur.)

idioms:

  • bring to justice    levar à justiça (f)
  • do justice    fazer justiça (f)
  • do justice to oneself    tratar alguém com justiça, realçar as qualidades de alguém
  • do oneself justice    provar algo, ter desempenho à altura
  • Justice of the Peace    Juiz de Paz (m) (Jur.)
  • rough justice    punição (f) severa ou injusta

Русский (Russian)
справедливость, правосудие, вознаграждение по заслугам, законность (чего-л.), судья

idioms:

  • bring to justice    отдать под суд
  • do justice    отдать должное
  • do justice to oneself    оценить должным образом, по достоинству
  • do oneself justice    показать кого-л. с лучшей стороны
  • Justice of the Peace    мировой судья
  • rough justice    короткая расправа, произвол

Español (Spanish)
n. - justicia, juez, equidad, jurisprudencia, magistrado

idioms:

  • bring to justice    llevar ante la justicia o ante los tribunales, capturar y enjuiciar
  • do justice    hacer justicia, hacer honor, actuar justamente, obrar con rectitud
  • do justice to    hacer justicia, hacer honor, actuar justamente, obrar con rectitud, hacer justicia con
  • do oneself justice    salir airoso, ser justo consigo mismo
  • do someone justice    hacer justicia, hacer honor, actuar justamente, obrar con rectitud, hacer justicia a alguien
  • in justice to    de modo de ser justo con
  • Justice of the Peace    juez de paz
  • rough justice    justicia sumaria, tratamiento severo

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - rättvisa, rätt, berättigande, riktighet

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
正义, 公正, 公平

idioms:

  • bring to justice    ...送交法院审判
  • do justice    公平地对待, 公正地评判
  • do justice to    公平对待, 适当处理
  • do oneself justice    公正待己
  • Justice of the Peace    治安法官
  • rough justice    简易裁决, 草率处罚

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 正義, 公正, 公平

idioms:

  • bring to justice    ...送交法院審判
  • do justice    公平地對待, 公正地評判
  • do justice to    公平對待, 適當處理
  • do oneself justice    公正待己
  • Justice of the Peace    治安法官
  • rough justice    簡易裁決, 草率處罰

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 정의, 당연한 처벌, 재판, 합법성, 법관

idioms:

  • bring to justice    재판에 회부하다
  • do justice    정당하게 다루다
  • do justice to    ~을 올바로 평가하다
  • do oneself justice    능력을 충분히 발휘하다

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - 正義, 公正, 正当性, 裁判官, 判事, 裁判, 司法, 司法官, 正義の女神

idioms:

  • do justice    正当に扱う
  • do justice to oneself    自分の能力を十分に発揮する
  • Justice of the Peace    治安判事

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) عداله, قضاء, حق, قاض‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮צדק, יושר, שופט‬


 
 
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