Review: Learning to Be Fair

Cover image of "Learning to Be Fair" by Charles McNamara.

Learning to Be Fair, Charles McNamara. Fortress Press (ISBN: 9781506495095) 2024.

Summary: The ancient origins of the idea of equity in western moral philosophy and the historical development of the concept.

The word “equity” has become part of the contentious triad of “diversity, equity, and inclusion.” As such, the concern for equity is deemed modern and “woke.” Hopefully one error the reader will not make after reading this book is to consider equity a newfangled notion. In Learning to Be Fair, Charles McNamara demonstrates that the concept of “equity” goes back at least two millennia to the Greeks. He also shows the contested character of the concept goes back to its origins.

He begins with the Greeks and how Aristotle differed from Socrates on the matter of what constitutes justice. Whereas Socrates treated it as an immutable absolute, Aristotle introduced the idea of epieikeia, from which our word equity comes via the Latin aequitas. Aristotle believed in adapting law to actual events and concrete situations.

He then turns to the Romans, and the relationship of equity to equality, reflected in tensions between democracy and aristocracy and ambiguity around questions of merit. The questions we struggle with in our own day are not new.

From here, McNamara turns to the idea of equity in English legal tradition. Not only were there courts of law but also courts of equity, or chancery courts. For example, he traces Thomas Hobbes’ concept of distributive justice, implemented through courts of equity. The term even makes it into Article III of the U.S. Constitution.

But this hardly settles its meaning. McNamara observes that two species of equity persist and are in conflict in our culture. One is “equity of the exception.” Here law is applied, taking into consideration concrete and specific circumstances. Then there is the “equity of the norm,” which seeks to treat all alike. Yet we often fail to do this for particular groups, hence the tension between the two species.

McNamara concludes the book noting the tension and vagueness around the term equity throughout history. Instead of the binary defined by the positions of Socrates and Aristotle, he commends the approach of Isocrates who treats equity as a poietikon pragma, a creative activity. Rather than equity being something “known,” he treats it as something “made,” in which equity is defined by us in our political processes.

That seems to me to be vague as well and capable of abuse. It requires the robust guardrails of democratic institutions with a balance of power. My own sense is that Isocrates holds together the “both-and” of the inherent tensions in equity. Rather than absolutism or utter relativism, good politics is creative in fashioning proximal, common good approximations of equity that meet the situation yet adhere to the rule of law. What this presumes is recognizing that political opponents need each other, which sadly does not seem to be the modus operandi at present.

However, what McNamara does offer is a challenge to the idea that equity reflects a contemporary “woke” progressivism. Rather, from the Greeks onward, equity, with all its challenges, is part of just governing, crucial to the functioning of a civil society. At the same time, he helps us understand why equity has been so contentious. And he gestures toward a politics that creatively negotiates that tension.

___________________

Disclosure of Material Connection: I received a complimentary copy of this book from the publisher for review.

Thanks for visiting Bob on Books.  I appreciate that you spent time here. Feel to “look around” – see the tabs at the top of the website, and the right hand column. And use the buttons below to share this post. Blessings! [Adapted from Enough Light, a blog I follow.]

The University Today: Economics

Education-Costs

This is the third of four posts on trends shaping the world of higher education today. The original audience for this material was the 2015 World Assembly of the International Fellowship of Evangelical Students, a gathering of collegiate ministry leaders from over 150 countries in Oaxtepec, Mexico. The two previous posts have dealt with internationalization, and technology.

This week, I turn to the economic issues shaping the landscape of higher education and consider the implications this has on research programs, the fate of academic programs, and access to higher education for prospective students from various socio-economic backgrounds. The questions I pose at the end concern the issues of justice and equity raised by these economic trends.

Economics:

Universities in most countries are facing economic pressures. In many settings, state subsidies of higher education has been significantly cut. Part of this reflects the massive debt loads many countries are facing. This also is reflected in changes in global research funding trends. The U.S. accounted for 37 % of research funding in 2001, but only 30% in 2011. EU funding dropped from 26 to 22 % in the same period while East and Southeast Asia research funding increased from 25 to 34 %.[1]

What these economic pressures have led to is the increasing corporatization of the university. Academic departments are being treated as “profit centers” and expansions or cuts in programs are determined almost solely on the basis of revenues generated. There has been a spate of articles in American media about the growth of the administrative class while growth in tenured faculty positions has been far slower, and universities increasingly rely upon lecturers or adjunct faculty to control costs.

One of the factors that drive international student enrollments is that many are subsidized by their governments or represent the economic elites of their countries and can afford to pay premium tuitions, enhancing the bottom lines of cash-strapped institutions.

The other economic issue is that students and their families are bearing increasing financial burdens for education, and this may lead to a new elitism in education. Student debt in the U.S. is currently estimated at $1.3 trillion dollars.[2] In countries where the cost of education is increasingly shifted to students, there is a danger of accentuating class divisions and opportunity inequities.

Questions:

  1. How might we advocate for shalom and justice in the university as it struggles with issues of cost?
  2. What ought to be our response if we find ourselves in the elite, or ministering to the cultural elites on our campuses?

[1] http://www.nsf.gov/statistics/seind14/index.cfm/chapter-4/c4s2.htm (last accessed 6/22/2016).

[2] http://www.cnbc.com/2015/03/10/student-loan-initiatives-could-benefit-40m-borrowers.html (last accessed 6/22/2016).