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A social sense of justice: the power of relationships in the interaction of procedural and distributive justiceHuxtable, Robert Dennis 17 July 2018 (has links)
Research on justice has produced two literatures, procedural justice and
distributive justice. Procedural justice research has focused on the
psychology of procedural preference, establishing reliable preferences for
adjudication over other dispute resolution procedures. Procedural justice
theories suggest these preferences are based on the concern of participants
with decision and process control. Distributive justice theories have
examined the justice rules that decision-makers use to determine the
appropriate distribution of resources, emphasizing the interpersonal
relationships among participants in determination of the “fair” rule for that
dispute. Research distinguishing these two justice literatures has concluded
that procedural justice concerns are the more robust: that procedural
manipulations are more determinative of fairness perceptions than are the
rules used for allocation outcomes. This research re-examines that
conclusion, using M. J. Lerner’s justice motive theories (1977, 1981) as the
bases of analysis for distributive justice while assessing the importance of
interpersonal relationship characteristics on procedural justice phenomena.
Three studies tested fairness perceptions of conflict scenarios constructed
to describe the relational characteristics of Lerner’s theories. Study 1
examines procedural preferences among adjudication, negotiations and
joint problem-solving under different interpersonal relationships outlined in
Lerner’s original forms of justice (1977), and assesses the distribution rule
preferences associated with those relationships. Study 2 tests the
evaluations of fairness of those justice procedures and distribution rules
across Lerner’s interpersonal relationship characteristics. Study 3
investigates the impact of Lerner’s revised forms of justice (1981) on
fairness of distribution rules and on participant concern for process and
decision control. Few consistent results for procedural justice emerged
across the first 2 studies: Psychological relations of identity/unit/nonunit
influenced procedural preference, with joint problem-solving most robust.
Adjudication was not the preferred justice procedure. Distributive justice
rule preference and fairness ratings in studies 1 and 2 offered only
inconsistent and partial support for Lerner’s original forms of justice.
Studies 1 and 2 suggested that people preferred a cooperative justice
procedure (joint problem-solving) but a competitive distribution rule
(justified self-interest). Results from Study 3 similarly presented only
partial support for Lerner’s revised justice theory: Only two of six justice
rules tested matched a relationship characteristic theorized as determinative
of perceived fairness, those being utilitarian decisions and legal contest.
Study 3 results showed process and decision control influenced by
relationship characteristics: Nonunit relationships were associated with
both third-party process control and third-party decision control. Results
of the three studies are discussed in terms of their implications for Lerner’s
theories and the interaction of distributive and procedural justice
literatures. It is apparent that while interpersonal relationships influence
both procedural fairness and distribution rule fairness, the power of
procedural and distributive justice theories in predicting fairness is weak. / Graduate
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Economic justice and income distribution : towards a theory of distributive justice /Matsui, Noriatsu January 1984 (has links)
No description available.
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Major issues in distributive teacher education /Nye, Bernard Carl January 1967 (has links)
No description available.
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The perceived effect of environmental influence on marketing strategy in the 1970s : a survey of senior corporate executives /Healy, Denis F. January 1973 (has links)
No description available.
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The effects of training plans on the perceptions of distributive education as a training program /cby Larry E. Casterline.Casterline, Larry E. January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
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Discomforting truths : the emotional terrain of understanding social justice in educationNkoane, M.M. January 2012 (has links)
Published Article / This paper seeks to problematise the discourse of social justice in education and engage educational practitioners in tensions that exist in understanding the theory of social justice. I argue that social justice in education is constructed in a way that seeks to disturb not only the tensions of conceptualisation but the traditional power relations present in educational practice as well. This paper is influenced by an eclectic mix of theoretical sources; I have adopted, as a critical lens, poststructuralist, postmodernist, feminist as well as postcolonial theories to interrogate the social justice discourse. While the paper argues that the concept social justice is dynamic and fluid, it attempts to draw the discomforting truths or tensions of conceptualizing social justice. The debates around the conceptualisation of social justice will enable us to better understand the theoretical position which would take us closer to understand social justice in education.
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CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS, JUDICIAL REVIEW, AND THE DISTRIBUTION OF BENEFITS.MILANICH, PATRICIA GAIL SMITH. January 1982 (has links)
The thesis approaches the question of distributive justice through an analysis of legal rights, focusing in particular on constitutional rights. In Part I (Chapters 1, 2, 3) conceptual issues of the meaning of rights are considered. The concept of a right is analyzed generally as (1) a claim to something; (2) which is logically correlated with a duty; and (3) which is justified, in the case of constitutional rights, by reference to constitutional grounds. The more specific Hohfeldian analysis of legal rights is then coordinated with the general account. Analyzing rights as justified claims leads to the question of what counts as constitutional justification which is in turn intimately tied to a correct account of judicial review. In Part II (Chapters 4,5) a definitive account of judicial review is attempted. After examining the logical base of legal reasoning and concluding that it is essentially dialectical, the major normative theories of judicial review are considered. In particular natural law, legal realism, reasoned elaboration, and legal positivism are considered and all are rejected in part. An attempt is then made to incorporate significant elements of each in a general theory using the coherence methodology of Ronald Dworkin. Finally the results are applied to a paradigm of the sort of judicial reasoning that seems to capture the elements picked out in the earlier analysis. It is argued that the thesis advanced here explains and justifies the judicial reasoning used in that case (Griswold v. Connecticut).
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Spatiotemporal Analysis of Eastern Equine Encephalitis Human IncidenceAva, Jessika Lane, Ava, Jessika Lane January 2017 (has links)
Spatial and temporal components play a critical role in explaining variability across geographic regions and time, and are necessary components to space-time epidemiological research.
Until recent years, most spatial epidemiological studies have used simple space-time analyses, but the continuous advancements in statistical modeling software and geographic information systems have made more complex spatial analyses readily available. However, methods may be problematic and several ongoing statistical weaknesses have been documented, including failing to account for three significant correlative factors - spatial, temporal, and spatiotemporal autocorrelations.
Using Eastern Equine Encephalitis (EEE) human incidence data, this Master's thesis aimed to answer the research question, is there a northeastern shift in human EEE incidence within the United States, by identifying a statistical model that adjusts for spatial, temporal, and spatiotemporal autocorrelations.
This thesis introduced the spatial autoregressive distributed lag (SADL) model, a model that adjusts for spatial, temporal, and spatiotemporal autocorrelations. However, results demonstrated that EEE is too rare an event for the SADL model to be appropriate, and a non-autocorrelation model was used as the final model. Results showed that EEE incidence is significantly increasing over time for all infected regions of the United States, with a significant difference of 1.4 cases/10 million between 1964 and 2015. Results did not demonstrate a northeastern shift in EEE incidence as the northeastern US had the highest expected incidence across the entire study period (1964-1967: 2.9/10 million; 2012-2015: 6.8/10 million), but results did demonstrate that the northeastern US had the quickest increasing risk for EEE as compared to other infected regions of the US with an increase in expected incidence of 3.9/10 million between 1964 and 2015.
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How can the Community of Enquiry (CoE) methodology be used to help make the decision making processes of a school managment team (SMT) in South Africa more inclusive, democratic, effective and collaborative?Marriott, Hassiena 28 May 2015 (has links)
An authoritarian and bureaucratic ethos adopted by South African Schools prior to 1994 continues to be adopted in many schools. It may be assumed that with the advent of the new South African democratic government in 1994 there would be more freedom given to schools to adopt different leadership styles that were relevant to their school context. Given the top-down culture and authoritarian leadership structures of schools that were designed and developed during the apartheid era, secondary school principals and school management teams have struggled to adopt a more democratic approach to running a school since 1994. In the previous dispensation, school decision making was mostly not a collective effort, and involved a minimum of consultation and sharing of ideas, with staff not being seen as having the role or potential to positively influence significant school decisions. The national Department of Education (2003) refers to this as “… the entrenched bureaucratic and hierarchical management practices inherited from apartheid traditions.” However, greater choice and autonomy of thought are part and parcel of the democratic paradigm.
A comprehensive literature review on the Community of Enquiry (CoE) methodology, a resource developed by Matthew Lipman, revealed a more open and inclusive approach to thinking together and embraces the principals of choice and autonomy. It is proposed that this methodology could be used to help school management teams (SMTs) become more collaborative and democratic in their approach to decision-making. Particular attention will be paid to the democratic values that underpin a CoE, in particular the values of equality, justice and freedom will be discussed with specific reference to the South African context.
Bureaucratic, autocratic and democratic leadership styles may be adopted by the SMTs in various schools and each leadership style could influence the decision making process as well as the culture within a school.
The CoE methodology could work in conjunction with a democratic leadership style to allow SMTs to be more collaborative and inclusive in the decision making process.
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Kantian distributive justice and low absolute earnings of workersLaird-Smith, Stuart 26 February 2007 (has links)
Student Number : 9307680N -
MA research report -
School of Philosophy -
Faculty of Humanities / Many individuals working in South Africa earn extremely low wages. I briefly
discuss these low wages, and examine their implications for the shareholders
(owners and controllers of businesses) in South Africa. I argue that shareholders,
in particular, have a moral duty to increase the absolute level of the wages of
their lowest paid workers. In this essay I choose to develop this position in the
context of Kantian distributive justice. I seek to join distributive justice and
Kantianism together to evaluate the moral status of the lowest paid workers. I
propose a just means of allocating the benefits of wages according to the work
performed that shows respect for workers’ autonomy.
Current South African stakeholder theory includes ‘equity’ claims arising from
compensatory justice issues. However, based on the arguments in this essay, I
believe we can see that there is also a definite independent moral duty in
distributive justice for shareholders to increase the amounts that they spend on
their worst-off employees. This spend is not necessarily only the wage costs for
these employees, but is also on self-empowerment tools such as education and
community services with which employees can build their life plans.
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