74772 - Theories of Law and Justice

Academic Year 2020/2021

  • Moduli: Giorgio Bongiovanni (Modulo 1) Alberto Artosi (Modulo 2)
  • Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures (Modulo 1) Traditional lectures (Modulo 2)
  • Campus: Bologna
  • Corso: Single cycle degree programme (LMCU) in Law (cod. 0659)

Learning outcomes

Students will familiarize themselves to the main features of the theoretical relationship between law and justice. This relationship will be analyzed both in relation to the areas in which the law raises issues of justice (content and validity of the rules, unjust legal system, justice in international law), both in relation to the demands of justice that the major historical and contemporary foundations of justice raised with respect to the legal regulation.

Course contents

The course will take place online.

In the event of a significant improvement in health conditions (significant lack of infections, identification of effective therapies, vaccination) the "mixed" modality (classroom and remote lessons) will be adopted. The new method will be announced in class and on my unibo website.

The course (divided into two modules: Prof. Artosi and Bongiovanni,) is devoted to the analysis of the main theories of justice with privileged reference to the relationship between justice and power and the role of law. The lessons will address these issues (justice, power, law) in the two modules of the course: the first module (prof. Artosi) will analyze them in relation to the main philosophical foundations (historical and contemporary), while the second (prof. Bongiovanni) will examine it in relation to the contemporary liberal debate.

In particular, the course will address:

Module 1 (prof. Alberto Artosi):

- the relationship between justice and power

- justice and power in Plato

- disciplinary power: M. Foucault

- the Foucault-Chomsky debate on justice and power

- the society of control: G. Deleuze

- the problem of justice in neoliberalism

Module 2 (prof. Giorgio Bongiovanni): the theory of justice in the contemporary liberal debate

- J. Rawls and the idea of “justice as fairness”

- R. Dworkin and the equality of resources

- The libertarianism of R. Nozick

- The capabilities approach of A. Sen and M. Nussbaum

- Liberalism and neoliberalism in M. Foucault: the birth of biopolitics

Readings/Bibliography

The course will take place online.

In the event of a significant improvement in health conditions (significant lack of infections, identification of effective therapies, vaccination) the "mixed" modality (classroom and remote lessons) will be adopted. The new method will be announced in class and on my unibo website.

The course (divided into two modules: Prof. Artosi and Bongiovanni,) is devoted to the analysis of the main theories of justice with privileged reference to the relationship between justice and power and the role of law. The lessons will address these issues (justice, power, law) in the two modules of the course: the first module (prof. Artosi) will analyze them in relation to the main philosophical foundations (historical and contemporary), while the second (prof. Bongiovanni) will examine it in relation to the contemporary liberal debate.

For the examination, the student must prepare either (1) materials and texts indicated in class or, alternatively, (2) the volume of M. Sandel, Giustizia. Il nostro bene comune, Feltrinelli, Milano, 2010 (or, alternatevely, the volume of S. Maffettone, S. Veca, L’idea di giustizia da Platone a Rawls, Laterza, Roma-Bari, 2008, two parts to choose between the parts II, III, IV).

Non-Attending Students

The exam will be on both of the selections below [a) and b)]

Selection a):

M. Sandel, Giustizia. Il nostro bene comune, Feltrinelli, Milano, 2010 (or, alternatevely, S. Maffettone, S. Veca, L’idea di giustizia da Platone a Rawls, Laterza, Roma-Bari, 2008, two parts to choose between the parts II, III, IV).

Selection b): One reading from the list below (only the single chapters or parts where these are specified) or a text agreed with the teacher:

Aristotele, Etica Nicomachea, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 1999 (o altra edizione), cap. 5

N.Chomsky, M. Foucault, La natura umana. Giustizia contro potere, Castelvecchi, Roma, 2018

R. Dworkin, Giustizia per i ricci. Milano, Feltrinelli, 2013

C. Fabre, Justice in a Changing World, Cambridge, Polity Press, 2007

M. Fischer, Realismo capitalista, Edizioni Nero, 2018

M. Foucault, Nascita della biopolitica, Feltrinelli, Milano, 2005

H. Kelsen, Il problema della giustizia, Torino, Einaudi, 2000

F. Nietzsche, Umano, troppo umano, I, Milano, Adelphi, 1979 (o altra edizione)

M. Nussbaum, Le nuove frontiere della giustizia, Bologna, Il Mulino, 2007

R. Nozick, Anarchia, Stato, Utopia, Milano, Il Saggiatore, 2008

V. Ottonelli, Leggere Rawls, Bologna, Il Mulino, 2010

Platone, La repubblica, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 1994 (o altra edizione)

T. Pogge, Povertà mondiale e diritti umani, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2010

J. Rawls, Una teoria della giustizia, Milano, Feltrinelli, 1982 o edizioni successive (parte I e, a scelta, parte II o III)

J. Rawls, Liberalismo politico, Milano, Edizioni di Comunità, 1994 o edizioni successive (parte I e, a scelta, parte II o III)

J. Rawls, Il diritto dei popoli, Torino, Edizioni di Comunità, 2001

M. Risse, On Global Justice, Princeton, Princeton University Press, 2012

A. Sen, L'idea di giustizia, Milano, Mondadori, 2010

A. Sen, La diseguaglianza, Bologna, Il Mulino, 2010

S. Zuboff, Il capitalismo della sorveglianza, Luiss UP, Roma, 2019

Teaching methods

The course consist in a series of lessons, in which selected texts and court rulings will be read and commented.

The lessons will be held in the second semester.
All the information relative to the course, along with any notice, will be available online at http://www.unibo.it/sitoweb/giorgio.bongiovanni

Assessment methods

The exam consists of an oral test aimed at testing the knowledge of the student about the topics covered by the exam program. Attending students also have the opportunity to prepare a written report on the course subjects agreed with the teacher: in this case, the oral examination will consist of a critical discussion of the elaborate.

The exam will be designed to assess not only the actual knowledge by the student of the key points of the story and issues related to the relation between law and ​​justice, but also to consider the ability of argumentation and understanding of the issues discussed. The examination therefore, tend to test the degree of familiarity of the student with the basic concepts and conceptions of justice and the problems that, in relation to the law, they raise.

The final grade is determined by a comprehensive assessment of the answers to several questions. In particular, the criteria according to which the final judgment will be graded are the following:

the achievement by the student of an organic vision of the topics discussed in class, combined with their critical use and a full mastery of expression and specific language will be assessed with a mark of excellence. Lack of concision and the usage of language and terminology which are not always appropriate will lead to a fair evaluation; knowledge gaps and inappropriate language - although in a context of acceptable knowledge - will not go beyond the grade threshold “sufficient”. Knowledge gaps, inappropriate language, and lack of any overall view of the basic issues discussed in textbooks and during the course that will lead to an insufficient assessment.

Students registering for the exam must so do using the University's computer network Almaesami.

There are no prerequisites that need to be satisfied for eligibility to take this exam.

Teaching tools

These include handouts summarizing the main course topics, the reading and commenting of selected texts, and tests to assess student performance. Supplemental course material (slides, bibliographies, arguments of discussion, etc.), will be available at https://www.unibo.it/sitoweb/giorgio.bongiovanni

 

Office hours

See the website of Giorgio Bongiovanni

See the website of Alberto Artosi

SDGs

Peace, justice and strong institutions

This teaching activity contributes to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals of the UN 2030 Agenda.