HREQ 3890 Lecture Notes - Lecture 8: Eurocentrism, Incisor, Neoliberalism
Document Summary
Rights is related to two significant themes of critical inquiry: social justice and human rights. Two foci are typically used to assess civil liberties, constitutional rights and privileges. The term social justice refers to equal outcomes and equal treatment that presumable construct a just society. Social justice values may be expressed in terms of obligations and fitness in regulating social relationship. Social justice may be viewed as dealing with economic and social lives within political contexts. Spiritual value is how individuals interact, their transformation in a society which is an extension of there. Ultimately, social justice confronts issues of values and ethnics regarding societal inequalities. Justice is viewed as fairness, recognizing the fairness of the process. Ideas of social justice can sway behaviours when discussions take place in society. Through principles of social justice society asks individuals to adjust their actions and choices for the moral good.