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E-raamat: Social Justice in Twentieth-Century Europe

Edited by (University of Oxford), Edited by (Universiteit Maastricht, Netherlands)
  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Mar-2024
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781009370820
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 07-Mar-2024
  • Kirjastus: Cambridge University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781009370820
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"Social justice has returned to the heart of political debate in present-day Europe. Using a transnational approach, this book provides the first historical account of the evolution of social justice across Europe during the twentieth century, and explores the divergent ways different groups have understood and sought to achieve social justice"--

Social justice has returned to the heart of political debate in present-day Europe. Using a transnational approach, this book provides the first historical account of the evolution of social justice across Europe during the twentieth century, and explores the divergent ways different groups have understood and sought to achieve social justice.

Social justice has returned to the heart of political debate in present-day Europe. But what does it mean in different national histories and political regimes, and how has this changed over time? This book provides the first historical account of the evolution of notions of social justice across Europe since the late nineteenth century. Written by an international team of leading historians, the book analyses the often-divergent ways in which political movements, state institutions, intellectual groups, and social organisations have understood and sought to achieve social justice. Conceived as an emphatically European analysis covering both the eastern and western halves of the continent, Social Justice in Twentieth-Century Europe demonstrates that no political movement ever held exclusive ownership of the meaning of social justice. Conversely, its definition has always been strongly contested, between those who would define it in terms of equality of conditions, or of opportunity; the security provided by state authority, or the freedom of personal initiative; the individual rights of a liberal order, or the social solidarities of class, nation, confession, or Volk.

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Provides the first historical analysis of the evolution of social justice in Europe during the twentieth century.
1. Social justice: a historical introduction Martin Conway and Camilo
Erlichman;
2. Social justice within a market society: the debate in Western
Europe from the end of the 19th century Ido De Haan; 3. Catholic conceptions
of social justice from 1891 to Pope Francis Rachel Johnston-White;
4. Social
justice through taxation? taxing the rich in Belgium in the 1920s Simon
Watteyne; 5. A fascist social justice? hierarchy, order and equity in
Southern European corporatism Pedro Ramos Pinto; 6. Social justice in
authoritarian central Europe: Czechoslovakia under nazism and communism Radka
ustrová; 7. Social justice in a socialist society: understandings of social
justice and social policy in hungary after 1945 Sándor Horváth;
8. Immigrants
and social justice in Western Europe since the 1960s Daniel Gordon;
9.
Re-imagining peace through social justice in mid-late twentieth-century
Europe Simon Reid-Henry;
10. Social justice or sexual justice? social justice
and the problem of women in twentieth-century Europe Celia Donert; 11. Equity
rules: social justice on the ruins of socialism Adrian Grama; 12. Bridging
the void: social justice in the history of the European Union Kiran Klaus
Patel;
13. Postscript Samuel Moyn; Index.
Martin Conway is Professor of Contemporary European History at Oxford. He is the author of a number of works, including Western Europe's Democratic Age 194568 (Princeton University Press, 2020). He is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society and of the Académie Royale de Belgique. His next project is on political masculinity in Twentieth-Century Europe. Camilo Erlichman is Assistant Professor in History at Maastricht University, where he heads the interdisciplinary research cluster Democracy in Europe: Past and Present. His doctoral thesis won the British International History Group Prize, and he has published on the history of mid-twentieth century Europe. He is now working on a project on the history of property.