Inequality is an exceptionally beautiful thing. Or maybe it's a terribly ugly thing. It depends on what is unequal and why it is unequal. Love it or loathe it, this collection is full of insights about the connections among fairness, liberty, equality and the quest for human dignity. With egalitarian sentiments and concerns about inequality on the rise, In All Fairness proves to be incredibly timely. In this collection of essays, authors challenge recent misbegotten egalitarian ideas, exposing the quicksand on which they rest and the self-serving interests they often promote. While each chapter offers unique insights, the overriding theme is that fairness must rest on a conception of humanity that recognizes the dignity of each person-a dignity that requires everyone to respect individual choices and voluntary transactions.
Inequality is an exceptionally beautiful thing. Or maybe it's a terribly ugly thing. It depends on what is unequal and why it is unequal. Love it or loathe it, this collection is full of insights about the connections among fairness, liberty, equality and the quest for human dignity. With egalitarian sentiments and concerns about inequality on the rise, In All Fairness proves to be incredibly timely. In this collection of essays, authors challenge recent misbegotten egalitarian ideas, exposing the quicksand on which they rest and the self-serving interests they often promote. While each chapter offers unique insights, the overriding theme is that fairness must rest on a conception of humanity that recognizes the dignity of each person-a dignity that requires everyone to respect individual choices and voluntary transactions.
Christopher J. Coyne is the F.A. Harper Professor
of Economics at George Mason University, Research Fellow for the
Independent Institute and Co-Editor of The Independent Review,
North American Editor for the Review of Austrian Economics and Book
Review Editor at Public Choice. He received his Ph.D. in economics
from George Mason University, and has taught at the University of
West Virginia. His books include Doing Bad by Doing Good: Why
Humanitarian Action Fails; After War: The Political Economy of
Exporting Democracy; Media, Development, and Institutional Change;
Context Matters: Entrepreneurship and Institutions; and The
Handbook on the Political Economy of War. Professor Coyne's
scholarly articles have appeared in the Journal of Institutional
Economics; American Journal of Economics and Sociology; European
Journal of Law and Economics; Constitutional Political Economy;
Review of Austrian Economics; The Independent Review; Economics of
Peace and Security Journal; Whitehead Journal of Diplomacy and
International Relations; Indian Journal of Economics & Business;
Journal of Intercultural Communication; Economic Journal; Foreign
Policy Analysis; Journal of Law; Economics and Policy; Review of
Political Economy; Case Western Reserve Law Review; Journal of
Economic Behavior and Organization; Institutions and Economic
Development; NYU Journal of Law & Liberty; and Kyklos.
Michael C. Munger is Co-Editor of The Independent
Review, Research Fellow at the Independent Institute, and Professor
of Political Science, Economics and Public Policy and Director of
the Philosophy, Politics, and Economics Program at Duke University.
He has been Staff Economist at the Federal Trade Commission,
President of the Public Choice Society, and President of the North
Carolina Political Science Association, and he has taught at
Dartmouth College, University of Texas at Austin, and the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He is past Editor of
Public Choice, he has won three University-wide teaching awards
(the Howard Johnson Award, an NAACP ""Image"" Award for teaching
about race, and admission to the Bass Society of Teaching Fellows),
and he is the recipient of the Duncan Black Prize for Best Paper in
Public Choice. Professor Munger’s many scholarly articles have
appeared in such journals as the American Political Science Review;
American Journal of Political Science; The Independent Review;
Journal of Politics; Journal of Law and Economics; Southern
Economic Journal; and Economic Inquiry. His books include Ideology
and the Theory of Political Choice; Analytical Politics, Empirical
Studies in Comparative Politics; and Analyzing Policy: Choices,
Conflicts, and Practices.
Robert M. Whaples is a Research Fellow at the
Independent Institute, Co-Editor and Managing Editor for The
Independent Review, editor of the Independent book Pope Francis and
the Caring Society, Professor of Economics at Wake Forest
University, Director and Book Review Editor for EH.NET, and a
member of the Board of Advisors for the Center on Culture and Civil
Society at the Independent Institute. Professor Whaples is the
recipient of both the Allen Nevins Prize and Jonathan Hughes Prize
for Excellence in Teaching Economic History from the Economic
History Association. He is the editor of the books, Historical
Perspectives on the American Economy (with Dianne Betts), Public
Choice Interpretations of American Economic History (with Jac
Heckelman and John Moorhouse), The Routledge Handbook of Modern
Economic History and The Routledge Handbook of Major Events in
Economic History (both with Randall Parker), and The Economic
Crisis in Retrospect: Explanations by Great Economists (with E.
Page West III). He received his Ph.D. in economics from the
University of Pennsylvania. He has also served as Assistant
Professor of History at the University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee,
Associate Editor of the Business Library Review, Chair of the
Cliometric Society, and editor.
"How, between the covers of a single volume, could one hope to
illuminate the vast sea of moral, intellectual, and political
failures that add up to modern egalitarianism? Only by combining
the expertise and insights of historians, economists, political
scientists, philosophers, legal scholars and more. With the book In
All Fairness, the Independent Institute has done so brilliantly.
Each author's contribution stands on its own and can be read with
profit. Taken together, they complement each other to create a
whole that far exceeds the sum of its parts."
--Steven E. Landsburg, Professor of Economics, University of
Rochester "Fairness counts among humankind's most fundamental
social desiderata--demanded even by small children on the playing
field. The difficulty is that it is easier to say what fairness is
than to determine what is fair. The many faceted book In All
Fairness, edited by Robert M. Whaples, Michael C. Munger, and
Christopher J. Coyne, does justice to the complexity of the topic
in its historical, philosophical, and economic dimensions. Anyone
who has ever been inclined to say 'but that's just not fair'--which
includes just about all of us--will find enlightenment and
information in this thoughtfully compiled, instructive, and
constructive book."
--Nicholas Rescher, Distinguished University Professor of
Philosophy, University of Pittsburgh; Founding Editor, American
Philosophical Quarterly;author, Fairness: Theory and Practice of
Distributive Justice "The authors of the timely book, In All
Fairness: Equality, Liberty and the Quest for Human Dignity, edited
by Robert M. Whaples, Michael C. Munger, and Christopher J. Coyne,
dig creatively into the roots of inequality, drawing from
philosophy, economics, and religion going way back in human
history. This fascinating book shows that realizing proposed
egalitarian wealth or income distributions requires a great deal of
coercive power, unfairly affects 'The Forgotten Man, ' and breeds
unintended consequences. The book rightly stresses equality of
opportunity achieved through economic freedom over equality of
outcomes."
--John B. Taylor, Mary and Robert Raymond Professor of Economics,
Stanford University; George P. Shultz Senior Fellow in Economics,
Hoover Institution "The beautiful book In All Fairness describes
how rapidly growing efforts to impose equality of outcomes
necessarily damages everyone's personal and economic freedom,
creates harmful social and cultural divisions, and depresses
economic growth that could give millions of people a better life.
You will benefit enormously from reading this book, irrespective of
where you stand on the debate about inequality."
--Lee E. Ohanian, Professor of Economics and Director of the
Ettinger Family Program in Macroeconomic Research, UCLA; Senior
Fellow, Hoover Institution "In All Fairness is a masterful and
insightful book devoted to exposing the shaky foundations and the
likely moral, social, and political costs of the campaign for
state-enforced equal outcomes for all. This campaign jettisons
liberal concern for equal liberty and equality before the law for
the elusive and yet destructive end of equal wellbeing or at least
equal income. The goal of equality is elusive because of the deep
difficulties of determining when equal wellbeing or income has been
achieved and whose ox will be gored and which liberties must be
denied to achieve it. The focus on equal outcomes shifts attention
from growth-friendly policies that have raised many hundreds of
millions up from poverty to redistributive policies that undermine
growth. In many distinct but converging ways, the book convincingly
argues that the crusade for equality undermines the core
institutions of a free and prosperous society and drives us to a
world of zero-sum, tribal conflicts."
--Eric Mack, Professor of Philosophy and Faculty Member, Murphy
Institute of Political Economy, Tulane University "In All Fairness
is an insightful exploration of the tension between liberty and
egalitarianism. Who will be better off if we opt for comprehensive
redistribution and therefore against freedom? It's certainly not
the poor. Read the book to find out why, especially if you think of
yourself as an egalitarian!"
--Sam Peltzman, Ralph and Dorothy Keller Distinguished Service
Professor Emeritus of Economics, Booth School of Business,
University of Chicago "Few matters bedevil American politics as do
the need to find proper understandings of liberty and equality and
the way government should endeavor to promote them. The authors of
In All Fairness: Equality, Liberty, and the Quest for Human Dignity
approach these matters from philosophical, economic, and historical
perspectives, all to great effect. This rare volume is an
intellectual feast that will repay repeated readings, whether the
reader is a beginner or an expert."
--Kevin R. C. Gutzman, Professor of History, Western Connecticut
State University "Equality is the theme, if not the obsession of
our time. Yet it means very different things to different people.
In All Fairness has brought together a range of scholars who
explore the political, economic, and legal dimensions of different
conceptions of equality dispassionately and seriously. Together
they bring light to a subject that desperately needs it."
--Samuel H. Gregg, Director of Research, Acton Institute for the
Study of Religion and Liberty "Every era has one or two hobgoblins
that, by frightening the uninformed, increase the power of the
state. One such hobgoblin today is economic inequality.
Fortunately, we today have also the superb book In All Fairness
that, if read widely enough, will reveal economic inequality to be
the non-issue that it is."
--Donald J. Boudreaux, Professor of Economics and Co-Director,
Program on the American Economy and Globalization, Mercatus Center,
George Mason University "Among the many important lessons of the
book In All Fairness, one of the most powerful is that when
governments implement policies designed to create more equal
outcomes, those policies compromise individual liberty but rarely
result in a more equal society. Every chapter of this volume offers
readers a thought-provoking analysis of the concept of equality and
the challenges involved in public policies to address
inequality."
--Randall G. Holcombe, DeVoe Moore Professor of Economics, Florida
State University; author, Liberty in Peril: Democracy and Power in
American History "A collaborative compiled and co-edited by the
team of Robert M. Whaples, Michael C. Munger and Christopher J.
Coyne, In All Fairness: Equality, Liberty, and the Quest for Human
Dignity is a collection of essays in which the authors challenge
recent misbegotten egalitarian ideas, exposing the quicksand on
which they rest, and the self-serving interests they often promote.
This original collection of erudite contributors is replete with
thoughtful and thought-provoking insights about the connections
among fairness, liberty, equality and the quest for human dignity.
While each individual chapter offers unique insights, the
overriding theme is that fairness must rest on a conception of
humanity that recognizes the dignity of each person--a dignity that
requires everyone to respect individual choices and voluntary
transactions. Enhanced for academia with the inclusion of a
thirty-page Bibliography, twenty pages of Notes, and a four-page
listing of the contributors and their credentials, In All Fairness:
Equality, Liberty, and the Quest for Human Dignity is unreservedly
recommended for community and academic library Political Science
and/or Contemporary Social Issues collections and supplemental
studies lists. It should be noted for students, academia, and
non-specialist general readers with an interest in the subject that
In All Fairness is also available in a digital book format."
--Midwest Book Review
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