Against the anticosmopolitan basic structure argument: the systemic concept of distributive justice and economic divisions of labor


Journal article


Edward Andrew Greetis
Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, 2019

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APA   Click to copy
Greetis, E. A. (2019). Against the anticosmopolitan basic structure argument: the systemic concept of distributive justice and economic divisions of labor. Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Greetis, Edward Andrew. “Against the Anticosmopolitan Basic Structure Argument: the Systemic Concept of Distributive Justice and Economic Divisions of Labor.” Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy (2019).


MLA   Click to copy
Greetis, Edward Andrew. “Against the Anticosmopolitan Basic Structure Argument: the Systemic Concept of Distributive Justice and Economic Divisions of Labor.” Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, 2019.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{edward2019a,
  title = {Against the anticosmopolitan basic structure argument: the systemic concept of distributive justice and economic divisions of labor},
  year = {2019},
  journal = {Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy},
  author = {Greetis, Edward Andrew}
}

Abstract

ABSTRACT I examine the main anticosmopolitan Rawslian argument, the ‘basic structure argument.’ It holds that distributive justice only applies to existing basic structures, there are only state basic structures, so distributive justice only applies among compatriots. Proponents of the argument face three challenges: 1) they must explain what type of basic structure relation makes distributive justice relevant only among compatriots, 2) they must explain why distributive justice (as opposed to allocative or retributive) is the relevant regulative concept for basic structures, and 3) they must put forth a plausible concept of distributive justice. I show that Rawlsians support what I will call the ‘division of labor thesis’ to answer the first two challenges. Briefly, the division of labor thesis holds that distributive justice only becomes relevant where members of a division of labor jointly produce some socioeconomic product. To meet the third challenge, Rawlsians seem to accept what Elizabeth Anderson calls the ‘modern systemic concept of distributive justice’ – the idea that distributive justice organizes entire economic systems with respect to their distributive consequences or the relationships they maintain. I argue that if Rawlsians accept the systemic concept, they should reject the anticosmopolitan basic structure argument.