State Responsibility and Individual Freedom: Debate on the Justification of Welfare Rights
返回论文页
|更新时间:2021-12-22
|
State Responsibility and Individual Freedom: Debate on the Justification of Welfare Rights
封面论文
JOURNAL OF UNIVERSITY OF JINAN (Social Science Edition)Vol. 31, Issue 2, Pages: 126-134(2021)
作者机构:
济南大学 政法学院,山东 济南 250022
作者简介:
基金信息:
DOI:
CLC:C913.7
Published:15 March 2021,
扫 描 看 全 文
Binyao TANG, Xiaofeng CONG. State Responsibility and Individual Freedom: Debate on the Justification of Welfare Rights. [J]. JOURNAL OF UNIVERSITY OF JINAN (Social Science Edition) 31(2):126-134(2021)
DOI:
Binyao TANG, Xiaofeng CONG. State Responsibility and Individual Freedom: Debate on the Justification of Welfare Rights. [J]. JOURNAL OF UNIVERSITY OF JINAN (Social Science Edition) 31(2):126-134(2021)DOI:
State Responsibility and Individual Freedom: Debate on the Justification of Welfare Rights封面论文
Although welfare rights have been established as the legal right
its nature and legitimacy are still widely discussed and questioned. The debate has long gone beyond the scope of law or legal philosophy and has become one of the core issues of social policy ideology. The essence of the issue of welfare rights lies in the relationship between the state welfare supply responsibility and individual freedom
which is the core issue of social policy research. Whether for the Western welfare states or for China
which is currently entering the era of social policy
it has both important theoretical and practical significance. The claims against the welfare rights or the negative position can be summarized as the consequence theory
the community value theory and the individual freedom rights theory. The defense or positive claims mainly include market criticism and correction theory
citizenship theory and positive freedom theory. This article argues that from the premise that the essence of welfare is to expand and realize the conditions of individual substantive freedom
the justification of welfare rights needs to answer the following three questions: Whether welfare can become a right; How welfare can become a right; and How welfare rights can be guaranteed.