Distributive Justice and Reparations

 

Prompt III: Distributive Justice and Reparations:
1. Write a short and precise introduction (under 40 words), explaining whether you will provide an objection to
reparations, or make a case for the compatibility or reparations with Rawls’ Principles of Justice. Make sure to
include the following in your essay:
2. Explain why Rawls believes that rational agents select the Difference Principle from behind the Veil of
Ignorance?
3. Next, explain why Nozick thinks that the implementation of Rawls’ Difference Principle would interrupt
Nozick’s principles of Just Acquisition and Transfer.
4. Next, explain why an ideally just society, on Nozick’s theory, would have to include reparations for slavery,
but an ideally just society, on Rawls’ theory, might not. Use examples from Ta-Nehisi Coates’s article, “The
Case for Reparations.”
5. Finally, present an objection to reparations that would be challenging for either Coates or Nozick to defend.
Alternately, present an account of why reparations for slavery might be justified (and morally required) even if
our society embraced Rawlsian justice (and followed his two principles of justice).
6. You do not need to include a “conclusion” to your essay

 

 

 

 

Sample Solution

Without a statute that provides a private right of action, even when a plaintiff has suffered economic harm as a result of trying to mitigate an anticipated future privacy violation, the Supreme Court has held that such an injury is too speculative for standing. In Clapper v. Amnesty International USA, the Court held that plaintiffs could not “manufacture standing” based on their fears of a speculative future harm and the money they spent in order to safeguard against surveillance of their client communications. This strict reading of the imminence requirement for standing further restricts the situations in which a privacy plaintiff may bring a claim absent a showing of an imminent violation.

In Europe, the GDPR has enabled litigants with a new set of rights, including the right to complain, select representatives, and receive judicial remedy when firms fail to comply with the GDPR. Just hours after the GDPR came into effect, Austrian activist Max Schrems’ non-profit None of Your Business (NOYB) filed complaints against Google, Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, arguing that they act illegally by forcing users to accept intrusive terms of service or lose access.

The complaints demand investigations by the European supervisory authorities, and under Article 83, propose fines of up to four percent of the companies’ worldwide annual turnover of the preceding year—the maximum possible fine under the GDPR. Importantly, claims by advocacy groups, such as NYOB, under the GDPR need not allege injury or harm—which would be required for class actions in U.S. federal court—but only failure to comply with regulation, even if no harm results. This allows privacy plaintiffs to overcome a difficult hurdle, as there are frequently no concrete harms for courts to latch onto in privacy claims. While class actions can be viewed as a convenient, effective remedy for harm, they also

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