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Informationen zum Autor Howard McGary is Professor of Philosophy at Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey. He has published numerous articles on questions of distributive justice and philosophical issues raised by racism. He is the co-author of Between Slavery and Freedom: Philosophy and American Slavery (1992) and he serves on the editorial boards of the Philosophical Forum, Encyclopedia of Ethics, and Social Identities. Klappentext Written by one of America's leading philosophers, Race and Social Justice provides a powerful analysis of the enduring problems of race and social justice in American life. McGary examines African American alienation and exploitations, black reparations, collective responsibility, affirmative action, race and I. Q., police discretion, racial integration and racial separatism, the underclass question, and the logic of interracial coalitions. The volume is marked by its interdisciplinary approach, depending on work in African American history and literature as well as recent work by legal scholars, political scientists, and sociologists who have wrestled with race and racism. African American philosophers have challenged the position that the African American experience cannot serve as a source of philosophical illumination. Philosophers like Anthony Appiah, Bernard Boxill, Bill Lawson, Michele Moody-Adams, Adrian Piper, and Laurence Thomas have employed traditional analytical methods in their examinations, while others like Leonard Harris, Lewis Gordon, Frank Kirkland, Lucius Outlaw, Cornel West, and Naomi Zack have embraced methodologies that are more characteristic of the Continental and Post Modern methodologies. These authors, each in their own way, have started a dialoge that has now worked its way into the pages of academic journals and onto the programs of philosophy conferences and meetings. Race and Social Justice joins and extends these discussions, providing essential reading for anyone with an interest in this field of debate and study. Zusammenfassung Presents an analysis of the enduring problems of race and social justice in American life. This book examines African American alienation and exploitations! black reparations! collective responsibility! affirmative action! race and IQ! police discretion! racial integration and racial separatism! and the underclass question. Inhaltsverzeichnis Preface. Acknowledgments. Introduction. Part I: The Problem of Racism: . 1. Alienation and the African-American Experience. 2. Race and Class Exploitation. 3. Racial Integration and Racial Separatism: Conceptual Clarifications. 4. The African-American Underclass and the Question of Values. Part II: The Response to Racism: . 5. Morality and Collective Liability. 6. Justice and Reparations. 7. Reparations, Self-Respect, and Public Policy. 8. Affirmative Action: A Review and Commentary. Part III: Racism and its Remedies: . 9. The Race and IQ Controversy. 10. Police Discretion and Discrimination. 11. DuBois, the new Conservatism, and the Critique of African-American Leadership. 12. Racism, Social Justice, and Interracial Coalitions. Bibliography. Index. ...