Abstract
This essay posits that justice is the core value epitomizing our moment. Justice is violated when positive outcomes are undeserved, and the felt sense of injustice motivates a need for retribution. Because politics involves allocation (distribution and redistribution), deservingness is a core appraisal of who gets what and therefore justice is fundamental for politics. This is especially germane to race, ethnicity, and politics scholars. I present a few core tenets of justice theory, and argue that political science can take advantage of the moment to engage the concept of justice; especially as it relates to the study of racial attitudes and the identification of racial enablers-those ostensible non-racists who facilitate the status quo. Summarily, I propose that justice can unify debates over prejudice and politics, and advance our scholarly understanding of how well-intentioned people-regardless of their identities, or ideological or partisan labels-can facilitate racism, racial inequality, and injustice.
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Wilson, D. C. (2021). Justice: The Racial Motive We All Have and Need. Journal of Race, Ethnicity and Politics, 6(1), 56–70. https://doi.org/10.1017/rep.2020.36
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