Livre - Being good in a world of need
160 TEM
Description
Livre
Oxford University Press
Temkin Larry S.
Presentation materielle : 387 p.
Dimensions : 24 cm
"Ours is a rich world filled with misery. This gives rise to a pressing question: how should the well-off respond to the needy? Peter Singer famously argued that just as we have an obligation to save a drowning child, we have an obligation to support charities like Oxfam. Inspired by Singer, Effective Altruism holds that we ought to support those charities doing the most good. Being Good in a World of Need powerfully challenges these views. Drawing on many sources, Temkin illustrates many disanalogies between saving a drowning child and supporting international charities, involving: intervening agents; effects of one's actions; corruption; responsibility; accidents versus injustice; and aid beneficiaries. These disanalogies raise complex issues requiring a pluralistic approach, rather than Effective Altruism's monistic, "do the most good" approach. Being Good discusses: ways aid may reward corrupt leaders and incentivize disastrous policies; charities ignoring or covering up negative impacts; the ethical disaster of aid efforts in Goma; brain and character drains; difficulties in replicability or scaling up model aid projects; ethical imperialism, paternalism, autonomy, and respect; Angus Deaton's contention that aid undermines government responsiveness; Jeffrey Sachs and the Millennium Villages Project; conflicts between individual and collective morality; fairness and responsibility; focusing on badly off people rather than countries; humanitarian versus development aid; and ways of aiding other than on-the-ground charities"
Table of Contents: 1:Introduction 2:Global Need: My Longtime Commitment and Earlier Views 3:Singer's Pond Example and Some Worries about Effective Altruism 4:Direct versus Indirect Aid 5:The Dark Side of Humanity, Part I—Worries about Internal Corruption 6:The Dark Side of Humanity, Part II—Worries about External Corruption 7:The Dark Side of Humanity, Part III—Where Evil Walks 8:Marketplace Distortions and Human Capital 9:Model Projects and the Difficulty of Predicting Future Success 10:Ethical Imperialism: Some Worries about Paternalism, Autonomy, and Respect 11:On the Relation between Aid, Governance, and Human Flourishing: Deaton's Worry 12:Individual versus Collective Rationality and Morality: A Troubling Possibility 13:Further Objections to Deaton's Worry and Some Responses 14:Responsibility and Fairness: Further Support for a Pluralistic Approach to Global Aid 15:Taking Stock, Clarifications, and Further Thoughts 16:Conclusion Appendix A: How Expected Utility Theory Can Drive Us Off the Rails Appendix B: On the Irrelevance of Proximity or Distance for Morality
Biblio. Index.