Affirmative Action, Non-Consequentialism, and Responsibility for the Effects of Past Discrimination

Public Affairs Quarterly 11 (3):281-301 (1997)
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Abstract

One popular criticism of affirmative action is that it discriminates against those who would otherwise have been offered jobs without it. This objection must rely on the non- consequentialist distinction between what we do and what we merely allow to claim that doing nothing merely allows people to be harmed by the discrimination of others, while preferential programs actively harm those left out. It fails since the present effects of past discrimination result from social arrangements which result from actions of ours. We can be responsible for the effects of past discrimination, even without having discriminated, if we are responsible for that discrimination having those effects.

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Mark van Roojen
University of Nebraska, Lincoln

References found in this work

Affirmative action.Alan H. Goldman - 1976 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 5 (2):178-195.

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