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Ingrid Robeyns
In his 1979 Tanner lecture, Amartya Sen asked the famous “Equality of
what?” question.1 Historically, utilitarians favored the maximization of
“utility,” which John Rawls and Sen both rejected. For Rawls, the answer
was “social primary goods.” Ronald Dworkin favored a specific account of
resources, which combined both internal as well as external resources.2
Sen suggested “basic capabilities” as the right answer—“a person being
able to do certain basic things.”3
Twenty-five years ago, G. A. Cohen published in this journal “On
the Currency of Egalitarian Justice.” This has become a hugely influ-
ential article, quickly acquiring the status of a canonical paper in the
philosophical literature on distributive justice. The two main topics that
Cohen addressed have both led to flourishing literatures. First, there is
the literature on how to decide when a claim of injustice is justified and
what, if any, weight is attached to personal responsibility in that pro-
cess. In political philosophy the work of Cohen, Dworkin, Richard Ar-
neson, and others gave rise to a family of egalitarian theories that be-
came known under the label luck egalitarianism; in adjacent disciplines
such as welfare economics, the term responsibility-sensitive egalitarianism
is more commonly used. The second major literature where “On the Cur-
rency of Egalitarian Justice” became influential is the question on the
metric of distributive justice: should that metric be Rawlsian social pri-
1132
4. Elizabeth Anderson, “What Is the Point of Equality?” Ethics 109 ð1999Þ: 287–337.
5. See also G. A. Cohen, “Equality of What? On Welfare, Goods, and Capabilities,” in
The Quality of Life, ed. Martha Nussbaum and Amartya Sen ðOxford: Clarendon, 1993Þ, 9–29.
6. For example, Anderson, “What Is the Point of Equality?” and Martha Nussbaum,
Frontiers of Justice ðCambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2007Þ.
7. G. A. Cohen, “Afterword to Chapters One and Two,” in his On the Currency of Egal-
itarian Justice and Other Essays in Political Philosophy, ed. Michael Otsuka ðPrinceton, NJ:
Princeton University Press, 2011Þ, 68.
8. See Cohen’s essay “How to Do Political Philosophy,” chap. 11, in Otsuka, On the Cur-
rency of Egalitarian Justice and Other Essays in Political Philosophy, 225–35.