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Evaluating parental power
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21 June 2017

Is parents’ power over their children legitimate? And what role does theoretical analysis play when we make such normative evaluations? While this book adds to the growing literature on parents, children, families, and the state, it does so by focusing on one issue, the legitimacy of parents’ power. It also takes seriously the challenge posed by moral pluralism, and considers the role of both theoretical rationality and practical judgement in resolving moral dilemmas associated with parental power.
The primary intended market for this book is advanced undergraduate and postgraduate students and established academics, in particular those with an interest in practical and applied ethics, contemporary political theory, moral theory, social theory, the sociology of childhood, political sociology, social work, and social policy.
PHILOSOPHY / Ethics & Moral Philosophy, Ethics and moral philosophy, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Social Policy, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / Marriage & Family, Politics and government, Sociology: family and relationships
‘Fives’ book is a wise, intelligent, consistently interesting, robustly argued and elegant discussion of issues that span the division of normative applied philosophy into ethics and political theory. It is an excellent contribution to the Lockean question of how and why power is rightly exercised by adult guardians over their children. No-one can read it without understanding this question better.’
David Archard, Queen’s University, Belfast, Journal of political power
1 Introduction: philosophy, power, and parents
Part I: Paternalism and its limits
2 Paternalism
3 Caretaker or liberator?
Part II: Conceptual and metholodogical issues
4 Moral dilemmas
5 Children’s agency
6 Parental power
7 Normative legitimacy
Part III: The moral legitimacy of parental power
8 Legitimacy in the political domain and in the family
9 Licensing, monitoring, and training parents
10 Children and the provision of informed consent
11 Sharing lives, shaping values, and voluntary civic education
12 Conclusion
Index