Activity: Evaluating a Society's Procedural Fairness
This activity directs an individual to assess the fairness of a familiar society by applying principles of procedural justice. It involves considering the 'rules of the game' within that society and judging whether the processes that lead to economic and social outcomes are fair.
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Library Science
Economics
Economy
Introduction to Microeconomics Course
Social Science
Empirical Science
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CORE Econ
Ch.5 The rules of the game: Who gets what and why - The Economy 2.0 Microeconomics @ CORE Econ
Related
Unfairness of a Coerced 50-50 Split
Subjectivity and Context-Dependency of Fairness Standards
Activity: Evaluating a Society's Procedural Fairness
Informational Requirements for Substantive vs. Procedural Fairness Judgments
Procedural Judgment of Fairness
A city government implements a new policy to allocate scarce public park permits. The permits are distributed via a lottery system where every resident has an equal chance of winning. The final result is that all the permits for a highly desirable park are won by residents of a single, wealthy neighborhood. Which of the following statements represents a critique of this situation based on substantive fairness?
Fairness in a Winner-Take-All Scenario
Analyzing Fairness Critiques
Match each critique of an economic outcome to the type of fairness judgment it represents.
Match each critique of an economic outcome to the type of fairness judgment it represents.
A company awards a large bonus to a single employee selected through a random lottery in which every employee had an equal chance to win. The lowest-paid employee wins the entire bonus. A critique that this outcome is unfair because one person received everything while others received nothing is a judgment based on the procedure used to make the allocation.
Evaluating Fairness in Economic Relief Policies
Fairness in Bonus Allocation
Imagine a scenario where two people are to divide $100. The 'rule of the game' is that Person A can propose any split, and Person B is forced to accept it. Person A proposes a 50/50 split, and they each receive $50. Which statement accurately analyzes the fairness of this situation using both procedural and substantive criteria?
To determine if an economic outcome is fair based on the process that produced it, one only needs to observe the final distribution of resources.
Analyzing Fairness Critiques
Learn After
Evaluating the 'Rules of the Game' in a Fictional Society
Evaluating the Fairness of Inheritance
A city government decides to allocate a limited number of highly profitable street vending permits. To ensure impartiality, they hold a lottery open to all city residents. The winners are chosen completely at random from the pool of applicants. Which of the following statements represents the strongest critique of this system from a procedural fairness perspective?
Comparing Hiring Processes for Procedural Fairness
A society's 'rules of the game' determine how outcomes are achieved. Analyze each of the following scenarios and match it to the principle of procedural fairness it best illustrates or violates.
A society that guarantees all its citizens an equal outcome, such as the same annual income, has, by definition, established a system with perfect procedural fairness.
Evaluating Procedural Fairness in Tax Systems
Evaluating Procedural Fairness in University Admissions
Evaluating Procedural Fairness in the Justice System
Designing a Fair System for Resource Allocation
Comparing Hiring Processes for Procedural Fairness