.  .
  • English
  • Français
  • Español

Rapports sur le développement humain - Programme des Nations Unies pour le développement (PNUD)

  • Skip to main content
  • home
  • Développement humain
  • Rapports
  • Indices & Données
  • Pays
  • Événements
  • Média
  • À propos
  • Recherche
Partager
  • À propos des Rapports
  • Éffectuer une recherche
  • Rapports mondiaux
    • RDH 2013
    • RDH 2011
    • RDH 2010
      • Résumé du Rapport
      • Télécharger
      • Distributeurs
      • Vidéos
      • Lancement
      • Actualité
      • Documents de recherche
      • Consultations externes
      • Présentations du BRDH
    • RDH 2009
    • RDH 2007/8
    • RDH 2006
    • RDH 2005
    • RDH 2004
    • RDH 2003
    • RDH 2002
    • RDH 2001
    • RDH 2000
    • RDH 1999
    • RDH 1998
    • RDH 1997
    • RDH 1996
    • RDH 1995
    • RDH 1994
    • RDH 1993
    • RDH 1992
    • RDH 1991
    • RDH 1990
  • Rapports régionaux
  • Rapports nationaux
  • Autres publications
  • Glossaire
  • eBooks

Rejoignez-nous

  • Liste courriel
  • Abonnez-vous
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

EN VEDETTE

Rapport 2013

L'essor du Sud : le progrès humain dans un monde diversifié
est disponible en téléchargement gratuit

Power, Stupidity, and Justice: the definition of capabilities, and their use

HDRO Conference Room
30 novembre 2009

Time: 12:30- 2:00 p.m.

Topic

I will explore three ways in which approaches that center on Amartya Sen’s notion of capabilities are importantly incomplete, and need supplementation and adjustment by reference to other kinds of considerations. Although it has been noted that Sen’s capability approach does little to explore issues of social independence, it is insufficiently understood that this limitation is built in to his understanding of the concept of a capability and his differentiation between opportunity freedoms (including capabilities) and process freedoms. I will lay out these connections to explain just how radical a shift it would be to try to integrate issues of strategic interdependence into a capability approach. How are capability indices meant to be useful? If they are intended as guides to policy, then there is a danger that they will encourage stupidity by ossifying policy-makers’ conceptions of their goals rather than encouraging them flexibly to remake their aims with due public input. The capability approach may also be intended to promote justice, as its emphasis on poverty suggests. But debates between, say, sufficientarian and prioritarian views about justice indicate that adopting a capability space of evaluating individuals’ opportunities for well-being is only the barest beginning of an approach to justice.

  • Henry S. Richardson: Presentation for the Human Development Report Office [366 KB]

About the Speaker

Henry S. Richardson is Professor of Philosophy at Georgetown University. He earned graduate degrees in law and public policy at Harvard before getting his PhD there (under John Rawls) in 1986. He is the author of Practical Reasoning about Final Ends (Cambridge University Press, 1994) and Democratic Autonomy: Public Reasoning about the Ends of Policy (Oxford University Press, 2002), winner of the Herbert A. Simon Best Book Award in Public Administration and the David Easton Award in the Foundations of Political Theory. He has recently engaged with the capabilities approach in “Rawlsian Social Contract Theory and the Severely Disabled,” The Journal of Ethics 10 (2006): 419-462 and “The Social Background of Capabilities for Freedoms,” Journal of Human Development 8 (2007): 389-414. He is the editor-at-large of the Human Development and Capability Association and the editor of Ethics.

HDR 2010 seminar series

The event will take place in the HDRO Conference Room, 304 East 45th Street, FF building 12th Floor. For more information, and to organize a building pass, please contact melissa.hernandez@undp.org

Retourner à la liste <<<<<


Haut de la page

Rapport 2013

  • Acceuil
  • Plan du site
  • Nous contacter
  • Emploi
  • Stages étudiants
  • Conditions d'utilisation
  • Webmaster
  • Liste courriel