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Oxford University Press, USA

Group Duties: Their Existence and Their Implications for Individuals

Group Duties: Their Existence and Their Implications for Individuals

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Moral duties are regularly attributed to groups. In the media or on the street, we might hear that a specific country has a moral duty to defend human rights, that environmentalists have a moral duty to push for global systemic reform, or that the affluent have a moral duty to alleviate
poverty. Do such attributions make conceptual sense or are they mere political rhetoric? And what does that imply for the individual members of these groups? Group Duties offers the first comprehensive answer to these questions. Stephanie Collins defends a Tripartite Model of group duties -
so-called because it divides groups into three fundamental categories. First, we have combinations - collections of agents that don't have any goals or decision-making procedures in common. These groups cannot bear moral duties. Instead, we should re-cast their purported duties as a series of
duties, one held by each agent in the combination. Each duty demands its bearer to 'I-reason': to do the best they can, given whatever they happen to believe the others will do. Second, there are groups whose members share goals but lack decision-making procedures. These are coalitions. Coalitions
also cannot bear duties, but their alleged duties should be replaced with members' several duties to 'we-reason': to do one's part in a particular group pattern of actions, on the presumption that others will do likewise. Third and finally, collectives have group-level procedures for making
decisions. They can bear duties. Collectives' duties imply duties for collectives' members to use their role in the collective with a view to the collective doing its duty. With the Tripartite Model in-hand, Collins argues that we can target our political demands at the right entities, in the right
way, for the right reasons.


Author: Stephanie Collins
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Published: 09/01/2019
Pages: 240
Binding Type: Hardcover
Weight: 0.90lbs
Size: 8.60h x 5.60w x 0.90d
ISBN: 9780198840275

About the Author

Stephanie Collins, Australian Catholic University

Stephanie Collins is a Senior Research Fellow in Philosophy at the Australian Catholic University. She was previously a Lecturer in Political Theory at the University of Manchester. She received her PhD in 2013 from the Australian National University. Her previous book, The Core of Care Ethics, was published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2015. Her work on group duties and collective responsibility has been published in outlets including Journal of Philosophy, Australasian Journal of Philosophy, Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Philosophical Quarterly, Journal of Political Philosophy, and Philosophy Compass.

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