Monday, August 18, 2014

New paper on the Capability Approach

Ingrid Robeyns has uploaded a new paper at SSRN:

"Capabilitarianism"

Abstract:      
"Despite the proliferation of scholarly work on the capability approach, and its wide endorsement as a theoretical framework in a variety of applications, there are very few sufficiently detailed accounts of what the capability approach exactly is. This is unfortunate, since a more robust understanding of what the capability approach is, and what it is not, would be beneficial for both the applied and empirical work, as well as a more solid foundation for advanced philosophical analysis. This paper presents an account of the capability approach that provides that basis: the concentric circles account. The concentric circles account allows us to distinguish what belongs to the core of the capability approach and what does not. It also allows us to see that there is a huge range of capabilitarian theories and applications possible, given that the core commitments can be combined with various (and diverse) additional normative and ontological claims in the outer circles. The concentric circles account also enables us to see why the Martha Nussbaum’s description of the capability approach, which is at present the only sufficiently specific account of the capability approach, is biased and misleading."

Ingrid Robeyns is Professor of Ethics of Institutions at the Utrecht University. She is co-editor (with Harry Brighouse) of "Measuring Justice. Primary Goods and Capabilities" (Cambridge University Press, 2010). [See my blog post on the book here.] A monograph by Robeyns on "The Capability Approach" is coming out later this year.

See also:

* Ingrid Robeyns's article on the capability approach at "Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy".

* A video with Ingrid Robeyns talking about the capability approach (2013).

* Ingrid Robeyns's review of "Creating Capabilities: The Human Development Approach" (Harvard University Press, 2011) by Martha Nussbaum.

1 comment:

Ingrid Robeyns said...

Thank you for the interest in my work, I'm honored. I'm sorry to say that the book won't be finished by 2014. My academic friends know I've been trying to write it up for a long time, but I've failed to find/make the time to do so (I always get seduced in working on other stuff). I am hoping to finish it sooner rather than later but 2014 seems no longer realistic. It will be Open Access so I'll gladly send you a "copy" when it's done :-)