This document discusses different theories of equality. It begins by introducing the concept of equality and defining it. It then discusses 6 types of equality: natural, social, civil, political, economic, and legal equality. It also examines the relationship between equality and liberty, discussing different viewpoints. It provides an overview of the liberal theory of equality, which focuses on equal treatment under the law. It then summarizes the Marxist theory of equality, which rejects the concept as abstract and focuses instead on opposition to economic exploitation. The document concludes by noting the inherent contestability of the concept of equality in a democracy.
This document discusses different theories of equality. It begins by introducing the concept of equality and defining it. It then discusses 6 types of equality: natural, social, civil, political, economic, and legal equality. It also examines the relationship between equality and liberty, discussing different viewpoints. It provides an overview of the liberal theory of equality, which focuses on equal treatment under the law. It then summarizes the Marxist theory of equality, which rejects the concept as abstract and focuses instead on opposition to economic exploitation. The document concludes by noting the inherent contestability of the concept of equality in a democracy.
This document discusses different theories of equality. It begins by introducing the concept of equality and defining it. It then discusses 6 types of equality: natural, social, civil, political, economic, and legal equality. It also examines the relationship between equality and liberty, discussing different viewpoints. It provides an overview of the liberal theory of equality, which focuses on equal treatment under the law. It then summarizes the Marxist theory of equality, which rejects the concept as abstract and focuses instead on opposition to economic exploitation. The document concludes by noting the inherent contestability of the concept of equality in a democracy.
This document discusses different theories of equality. It begins by introducing the concept of equality and defining it. It then discusses 6 types of equality: natural, social, civil, political, economic, and legal equality. It also examines the relationship between equality and liberty, discussing different viewpoints. It provides an overview of the liberal theory of equality, which focuses on equal treatment under the law. It then summarizes the Marxist theory of equality, which rejects the concept as abstract and focuses instead on opposition to economic exploitation. The document concludes by noting the inherent contestability of the concept of equality in a democracy.
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 10
UNIVERSITY INSTITUTE OF LEGAL
STUDIES, PANJAB UNIVERSITY
(CHANDIGARH)
POLITICAL SCIENCE
PROJECT ON
EQUALITY
Submitted by:- Submitted to:-
Srishti Sharma Prof. Nirmal
BA LLB(Hons.) Section-C Semester-II INDEX
1.) INTRODUCTION TO EQUALITY
2.) CHARACTERISTICS OF EQUALITY
3.) KINDS OF EQUALITY
4.) RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LIBERTY AND EQUALITY
5.) LIBERAL THEORY OF EQUALITY
6.) MARXIST THEORY OF EQUALITY
7.) CONCLUSION
8.) BIBLIOGRAPHY INTRODUCTION TO EQUALITY
Equality originates from aequalis, aequus and aequalitas.
These are all old French or Latin words. These French/Latin words mean even, level and equal. Thus, the meaning of the word equality used in political science corresponds to the meaning from which it originates. The term equality used in political science differs from uniformity, identity and sameness. Equality does not mean obliteration of diversity. Number of political scientists has defined the concept of equality. According to Laski equality means “coherence of ideas”. In the treatment meted out to different individuals there shall persist coherence. While privileges are distributed among the individual’s justice and reason must be maintained so that no individual can think that he is neglected or is deprived of his due share. In the distribution of privileges attention shall be paid to the development of personality. It means the absence of special privileges. Individual’s claim for the privilege’s rests on the ground that without it he cannot develop his personality and because of this reason an individual’s claim for something is logical and legitimate. In that case, if some individuals are deliberately made to suffer that will be a gross violation of equality. Of course, the deprived person must prove that others have been given more than what is reasonably his due. Mere providing privileges or opportunities is not all. This does not bear the complete meaning of equality. Laski further states that privileges provided by the authority must be adequate. Individuals, with the help of inadequate opportunities, cannot develop personality. CHARACTERISTICS OF EQUALITY
1. Equality does not stand for absolute equality. It accepts the
presence of some natural inequalities. 2. Equality stands for absence of all unnatural man- made inequalities and specially privileged classes in the society. 3. Equality postulates the grant and guarantee of equal rights and freedoms to all the people. 4. Equality implies the system of equal and adequate opportunities for all the people in society. 5. Equality means equal satisfaction of basic needs of all the persons before the special needs’, and luxuries of some persons may be met. 6. Equality advocates an equitable and fair distribution of wealth and resources i.e. Minimum possible gap between the rich and poor. 7. Equality accepts the principle of protective discrimination for helping the weaker sections of society. In the Indian political system, right to equality has been given to all and yet there stands incorporated provisions for granting special protection facilities and reservations to persons belonging to Scheduled Castes, Scheduled Tribes Other Backward Classes, minorities, women, and children. Thus, Equality stands for 3 Basic Features: (a) Absence of special privileges in society. (b) Presence of adequate and equal opportunities for development for all. (c) Equal satisfaction of basic needs of all. KINDS OF EQUALITY 1. Natural Equality: Despite the fact that men differ in respect of their physical features, psychological traits, mental abilities and capacities, all humans are to be treated as equal humans. All are to be considered worthy of enjoying all human rights and freedoms. 2. Social Equality: It stands for equal rights and opportunities for development for all classes of people without any discrimination. A modern central theme of social equality is to end gender inequality, to ensure equal status and opportunities to the women and to ensure equal rights of male and female children to live and develop. 3. Civil Equality: It stands for the grant of equal rights and freedoms to all the people and social groups. All the people are to be treated equal before Law. 4. Political Equality: It stands for equal opportunities for participation of all in the political process. This involves the concept of grant of equal political rights for all the citizens with some uniform qualifications for everyone. 5. Economic Equality: Economic equality does not mean equal treatment or equal reward or equal wages for all. It stands for fair and adequate opportunities to all for work and for earning of their livelihoods. It also means that primary needs of all should be met before the special needs of few are satisfied. The gap between rich and poor should be minimum. There should be equitable distribution of wealth and resources in the society. 6. Legal Equality: Finally, Legal Equality stands for equality before law, equal subjection of all to the same legal code and equal opportunity for all to secure legal protection of their rights and freedom. There should rule of law and laws must be equally binding foe all. In every society equality must be ensured in all these forms. RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN LIBERTY AND EQUALITY There is a great controversy among the modern scholars of political science about the relationship between liberty and equality. In 19th century, the advocates of individualism demanded liberty for the sake of free competition and their ideas went against the theory of equality. Some scholars thought that the concept of equality and liberty are against each other. Lord Acton commented that the passion for equality ‘made vain the hope of freedom’. By liberty he wanted to mean unrestrained right to satisfy the appetite for wealth and power. He had the apprehension that the establishment of equality would impose restrictions on the freedom of the wealthy people, and so he considered equality to be antithetic to liberty. Thinkers like Tocqueville, Spencer and Begihot also expressed the same view. John Stuart Mill thought that liberty and equality are complementary to each other. He analyzed liberty from the perspective of social welfare. For this reason, Mill opined that economic equality is necessary for establishing liberty. In the 20th century, Hobouse, Laski, Barker, Tawney, Pollard and others considered that equality and freedom are complementary to each other. Even Rousseau argued in the 18th century that freedom is impossible without equality. Analysing the correlation between liberty and equality, Barker observes that equality is not a detached principle. It stands in favour of the principles like liberty and fraternity. So, what is needed is the proper coordination between equality, liberty and fraternity. So, it may be said that equality and liberty are not antithetic to each other; they rather supplement each other. LIBERAL THEORY OF EQUALITY Equality is an ideal upheld by a number of ideologies, but nowadays it is seldom associated with libertarianism or classical liberalism. Indeed, both libertarians and their critics typically think of equality as an ideal in tension with the ideal of liberty as libertarians understand it. For a liberal in the original sense, a free society must aim first and foremost at minimizing the exercise of arbitrary power by limiting all coercion to what can be accomplished by equal, invariable, and indiscriminate law. Thus, the rule of law, the absence of arbitrary legal privileges or distinctions of status, appears to the liberal as the legal embodiment of freedom and equality alike, and as his greatest and proudest achievement. The liberal champion of formal equality before the law will have an eye, to be sure, on inequalities of opportunity, though he will resist the tendency to focus too narrowly on what happens to be most easily quantified. MARXIST THEORY OF EQUALITY Marx eschewed the entire concept of equality as abstract and bourgeois in nature, focusing his analysis on more concrete issues such as opposition to exploitation based on economic and materialist logic. Marx renounced theorizing on moral concepts and refrained from advocating principles of justice. Marx's views on equality were informed by his analysis of the development of the productive forces in society. the fact that social inequality, related to the appearance and maintenance of an indigent proletariat, under the influx of bourgeois exploitation, constituted the basis of empiric support for the Marxian theoretical and political endeavour. Thus, it cannot be said that there are no contributions in Marx's work that help to elucidate the real movement of capitalist social policy. CONCLUSION For political thinkers concerned with what constitutes good democratic politics, concentrations of power are sources of concern wherever they are found. This is especially the case when these concentrations of power threaten the basic democratic notion that citizens should have a meaningful capacity to govern themselves and participate on a roughly equal basis with other citizens in their collective self-governance. In thinking about what constitutes a good democratic politics we need to recognize the inherent contestability of the very concept of equality and that equality is one value among many (albeit a very important value to democracy). Democracy, by its very nature, requires that no conception of the nature of equality can be taken off the table of political discourse and debate. Furthermore, no single conception should always prevail in democratic deliberations or it risks the commitment of citizens who do not share the dominant conception of the democratic project. It is in fact the rich contestation over equality and its relation to other political values that helps ensure that new forms of domination cannot creep unnoticed into democratic polities. BIBLIOGRAPHY Politicalsciencenotes.com Youtharticlelibrary.com Scielo.br