Lockean Property Ethics and Restitution

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In this book, David Jarrett argues that the influential Lockean thesis of justice in property, which traces back to John Locke, seems to entail much egalitarian property redistribution. Put briefly, Lockeans argue that people justly own: (1) any unowned natural resources they labour on, (2) any resources they receive via voluntary transfer from a legitimate owner, and (3) any resources they legitimately receive in compensation for harm done to their person or legitimately held property. However, a question that has been largely overlooked by Lockeans is how to address the problem of property which did not arise in line with Lockean justice. What do we do about property which derives from feudal and colonial conquest, for example? Drawing on a range of theoretical and historical sources, this book argues that the legal concept of restitution is the most reasonable way to address the problem. If we apply this concept, it appears that much property in the world is held unjustly and should be redistributed in an egalitarian manner. Lockean Property Ethics and Restitution will be of interest to political theorists and philosophers alike.

Author(s): David Jarrett
Series: Routledge Studies in Social and Political Thought
Edition: First
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 152
City: New York and Oxford
Tags: Locke, Rothbard, Hoppe, Nozick, libertarianism, libertarian party, property, ethics, justice, restitution, Marx, Alex Jones, natural law, natural rights, value, Austrian economics, G.A. Cohen, exploitation, Spooner, Konkin, Kevin Carson

Acknowledgements vi
List of acronyms vii
Introduction 1
1 Lockean property ethics 10
2 The Lockean law of restitution 38
3 Alternative approaches to addressing Lockean injustice 61
4 Unjustly acquired property 80
5 Redistribution 105
Conclusion 124
Appendix: More on Lockean exploitation 127
Index 149