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Social justice and affirmative action
Authors:Ralph Premdas
Affiliation:1. Professor of Public Policy, Institute for Social and Economic Studies, University of the West Indies, St. Augustine, Trinidad and Tobagoralph.premdas@sta.uwi.edu
Abstract:ABSTRACT

While the concept ‘justice’ undergirds every discourse on affirmative action, its meaning is feverishly contested with contradictory definitions wielded as battling swords in a zero sum struggle over the distribution of scarce material resources and symbolic goods. In part, the issues have become even more important since the number of states that have now embarked on affirmative action policies have been growing and the results have been diverse. Affirmative action policies have occurred most frequently in internally heterogeneous societies marked by deep ethno-cultural divisions in which one ethnic community has tended to dominate the rest. To overcome inequalities and ingrained segmental prejudices in these multi-ethnic countries that witnessed over the years the cementing of advantages and privileges among certain ethnic groups has been the primary aim of affirmative action policies. Upheavals and ongoing conflicts have generally dogged these experiences, attesting to some successful societal changes in institutions and practices, to winners and losers. In this paper, we examine some of the controversies, especially in relation to two paradigms and perspectives of social justice.
Keywords:Affirmative action  social justice  multi-ethnic states  compensation  re-distribution  discrimination
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