Democracy, law and relationships of domination – a response to ‘Can Republicanism tame public health?'
Democracy, law and relationships of domination – a response to ‘Can Republicanism tame public health?'
This brief comment responds to some of the issues raised by Daniel Weinstock’s paper on the application of the republican ideal to public health. It considers the application outside of that specific context of both the problem Weinstock identifies and the solution he proposes. It queries, with reference to the different sorts of relationships of domination which exist, whether a republican approach to public health might not be better to seek to begin from private relationships of domination and to define its scope with reference to such relationships.
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Scott, Paul
d83e2317-35ca-4db4-9788-5752834c3b4b
Scott, Paul
d83e2317-35ca-4db4-9788-5752834c3b4b
Scott, Paul
(2016)
Democracy, law and relationships of domination – a response to ‘Can Republicanism tame public health?'.
Public Health Ethics, .
(doi:10.1093/phe/phw023).
Abstract
This brief comment responds to some of the issues raised by Daniel Weinstock’s paper on the application of the republican ideal to public health. It considers the application outside of that specific context of both the problem Weinstock identifies and the solution he proposes. It queries, with reference to the different sorts of relationships of domination which exist, whether a republican approach to public health might not be better to seek to begin from private relationships of domination and to define its scope with reference to such relationships.
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Democracy, Law and Relationships of Domination (Main document).doc
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Accepted/In Press date: 9 April 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 28 April 2016
Organisations:
Southampton Law School
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Local EPrints ID: 391471
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/391471
ISSN: 1754-9973
PURE UUID: 67ba2d1c-686b-4186-8c52-8657bf453dc8
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Date deposited: 12 Apr 2016 15:47
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 05:29
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Author:
Paul Scott
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