Contested Commodities

by
Format: Paperback
Pub. Date: 2001-11-05
Publisher(s): Harvard Univ Pr
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Summary

Not only are there willing buyers for body parts or babies, Radin observes, but some desperately poor people would be willing sellers, while better-off people find such trades abhorrent. Radin observes that many such areas of contested commodification reflect a persistent dilemma in liberal society: we value freedom of choice and simultaneously believe that choices ought to be restricted to protect the integrity of what it means to be a person. She views this tension as primarily the result of underlying social and economic inequality, which need not reflect an irreconcilable conflict in the premises of liberal democracy.As a philosophical pragmatist, the author therefore argues for a conception of incomplete commodification, in which some contested things can be bought and sold, but only under carefully regulated circumstances. Such a regulatory regime both symbolizes the importance of nonmarket value to personhood and aspires to ameliorate the underlying conditions of inequality.

Table of Contents

Preface xi
Commodification as a Worldview
1(15)
Market-Inalienability
16(14)
Problems for the Idea of a Market Domain
30(16)
Compartmentalization: Attempting to Delineate a Market Domain
46(8)
Personhood and the Dialectic of Contextuality
54(25)
Human Flourishing and Market Rhetoric
79(23)
Incomplete Commodification
102(13)
Conceptual Recapitulation
115(8)
The Double Bind
123(8)
Prostitution and Baby-Selling: Contested Commodification and Women's Capacities
131(23)
Commodification, Objectification, and Subordination
154(10)
Free Expression
164(20)
Compensation
184(22)
Democracy
206(19)
Notes 225(46)
Index 271

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