Sexual orientation as a justice issue: Issues of postmodern social philosophy and religion for civil rights |
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Authors: | Paula D Nesbitt |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Sociology, University of Denver, 80210 Denver, Colorado |
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Abstract: | This essay theoretically explores three core concerns for social justice research and analysis in the transition from social and legal philosophical foundations based upon Enlightenment categorical universals to a postmodern context that recognizes concurrent globalization and the constructed nature of particular status identities. Utilizing sexual orientation as a case study, the concerns are, what constitutes a civil right in a postmodern context, how useful are categories versus behaviors in protecting civil rights, and how does religion affect the civil morality that justifies and legitimates justice criteria? The argument is made that a justice construct for sexual orientation must rely both on behavioral freedoms and ontological status for adequate protection of human dignity and equality. It also is argued that interreligious discourse is essential to reparticularize religiomoral assumptions that have justified inequality and to provide an adequate negotiated grounding to legitimate shared norms upon which postmodern justice philosophy can be built. |
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Keywords: | civil rights human rights postmodern religion sexual orientation |
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