Adaptive Preferences and Women's Empowerment
Series: Studies in Feminist Philosophy;
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP USA
- Date of Publication 13 October 2011
- ISBN 9780199777884
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages264 pages
- Size 160x236x22 mm
- Weight 499 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
Khader offers a deliberative perfectionist approach to identifying and responding to adaptive preferences-- deprived people's preferences that perpetuate their deprivation.
MoreLong description:
Women and other oppressed and deprived people sometimes collude with the forces that perpetuate injustice against them. Women's acceptance of their lesser claim on household resources like food, their positive attitudes toward clitoridectemy and infibulations, their acquiescence to violence at the hands of their husbands, and their sometimes fatalistic attitudes toward their own poverty or suffering are all examples of "adaptive preferences," wherein women participate in their own deprivation.
Adaptive Preferences and Women's Empowerment offers a definition of adaptive preference and a moral framework for responding to adaptive preferences in development practice. Khader defines adaptive preferences as deficits in the capacity to lead a flourishing human life that are causally related to deprivation and argues that public institutions should conduct deliberative interventions to transform the adaptive preferences of deprived people. She insists that people with adaptive preferences can experience value distortion, but she explains how this fact does not undermine those people's claim to participate in designing development interventions that determine the course of their lives. Khader claims that adaptive preference identification requires a commitment to moral universalism, but this commitment need not be incompatible with a respect for culturally variant conceptions of the good. She illustrates her arguments with examples from real-world development practice.
Khader's deliberative perfectionist approach moves us beyond apparent impasses in the debates about internalized oppression and autonomous agency, relativism and universalism, and feminism and multiculturalism.
Serene J. Khader offers a thorough, insightful, and well-constructed account of APs that offers a fresh perspective on this debate. ... Khaders book is very insightful, with clear definitions, and convincing argumentation. She advances greatly the philosophical conversation by offering a more nuanced version of APs and re-situating them in terms of flourishing rather than autonomy. Furthermore, her practical recommendations are especially promising for development practitioners.
Table of Contents:
Contents
Introduction
Adaptive Preferences and Global Justice
A Deliberative Perfectionist Approach to Adaptive Preference Intervention
Adaptive Preferences and Choice: Are Adaptive Preferences Autonomy Deficits?
Adaptive Preferences and Agency: The Selective Effects of Adaptive Preferences
The Deliberative Perfectionist Approach, Paternalism, and Cultural Diversity
Reimagining Intervention: Adaptive Preferences and the Paradoxes of Empowerment