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Samenvatting Solidarity And Social Justice knowledge clips uitgebreid $7.36   Add to cart

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Samenvatting Solidarity And Social Justice knowledge clips uitgebreid

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This summary contains the knowledge clips from Solidarity and Social Justice. I took the slides of the powerpoints as a basis and added a lot of what the teachers say in the clips. So everything is clearly explained.

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  • May 19, 2022
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  • 2021/2022
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Solidarity and social justice knowledge clips notes
Nine Plantenga

Knowledge clip 1.1: Solidarity – sociological and historical roots

Historical roots of solidarity
Practical assumptions: how do we depend on each other
Normative assumptions: what do we expect from each other
When you look historically at solidarity, it is about:
 A common identity: shared aims and interest (mutual attachment)
 Family/ kinship (gezin)
 Fraternity (brotherhood): voluntary relationships with others
- Christian value: fellowship (same interest)
 Political value: in the French Revolution, fraternity becomes symbolic, for the fight
for freedom and equality
 Community: In the 19th century, solidarity was mainly seen in terms of community.
- Gemeinschaft: shared life experiences (work, community); community; a
willingness to share recourses.
Shift to (Theunis):
- Gesellschaft: society (solidarity as a moral principle underlying society (and the
welfare state))

Sociological roots of solidarity
 Solidarity: sociological critique of social contract (Hobbes, Locke, Spencer)
- Social contract: implicit (suggested) societal agreement about sharing recourses
 Leroux, Comte and Tonnies argued the social contract theory, because they thought
it was too focused on rational acting (act for self-interest)
- Leroux focused on that people are depended on and interdepending with others
- Leroux: solidarity is having shared values
- Comte: solidarity as an integrative mechanism in society  something that holds
society together

Durkheim (late 19th century, industrial revolution):
 Solidarity is a normative, integrated mechanism
Mechanical solidarity
 Durkheim sees this appearance in pre-industrial (traditional) society
 Little differentiation (sameness)  people had the same lifestyle
 Collective consciousness  people had a shared set of beliefs, norms and ideas 
this bounded society together
 Material element: people are alike
 Subjective element: people think alike

Organic solidarity
 Durkheim sees this appearance in modern (industrial) society
 People became less self-sufficient  people rely more on other people and their
specialization
 Specialization/ high degree of differentiation/ division of labor

,  Individual consciousness  we’re becoming aware of how depended on we are from
other people
 Interdependence  the differences between people are getting bigger, so the
interdependence also becomes bigger


Knowledge clip 1.2: Forms of solidarity – a sociological perspective

Forms of solidarity:
 Human solidarity: is about thighs between humans. It is about the earlier
conceptions of solidarity (like thighs between family members)
 Social solidarity: is about solidarity as a cohesive element in society  what keeps us
connected in society?
 Political solidarity: a group of people are standing up for their shared interests 
actively taking a role for your shared interests.
 Civic solidarity: this is referring to the welfare state  it redistributes resources
among the population of its citizens.

Critique about the forms of solidarity:
 There is not much of a distinction between the subjects (who is giving solidarity) and
the objects (who is (not) receiving solidarity) of solidarity. So there is insufficient
clarity between solidarity as a concept and social justice.
 There is an assumption that each of this these 4 forms about solidarity is somehow
exclusive.

Exclusive vs. inclusive solidarity:
 Exclusionary ingroup solidarity: this exists between a group of people based of
shared identity of common interest  this excluded the people who don’t have that
shared identity.
 Inclusionary outgroup solidarity: being solidaristic with people who do have
different identities, interests, of social/cultural heritage than we (look back at
Durkheims industrial societies).
- Example: refugees from Ukraine vs. refugees from other countries

With whom are we solidaristic?
 Citizenship rights: citizens’ rights to have basic needs fulfilled, as a right of citizenship
rather than charity.
- Social citizenship rights: they include things that ensure that we have a
minimum standard of living. For example: our rights on education, tax benefits,
time to take off when a child is born etc.
- Civic citizenship rights: they guarantee our equality under the law. This is not
everywhere the case for minority groups. For instance, gay marriage is not legal
everywhere.
 Boundary drawing: the inclusion and exclusion regarding the scope of justice and this
accurse across civic, social and familial solidarity.
Knowledge clip 1.3: The Social Identity Approach: The basics

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