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Jewish Emancipation in Prussia Jewish Emancipation in Prussia
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Postcolonial Struggles for Recognition Postcolonial Struggles for Recognition
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Poverty and Social Exclusion Poverty and Social Exclusion
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7 Struggles for Recognition
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Published:May 2018
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Abstract
Following claims made by A. Honneth, N. Fraser, and C. Taylor, this chapter takes its point of departure in the observation that many of the world’s social conflicts revolve around the need to promote both universal respect for shared humanity and esteem for cultural distinctiveness. In other words, it recognizes how, beyond its economic (or capitalist) organization, and the question of the fair distribution of goods and resources, many contemporary struggles revolve around the longing for recognition and the right to be recognized, analyzed in the previous chapter. It provides specific examples of the demand to recognize the intrinsic worth and value of traditionally marginalized and subordinated groups, from the emancipation of Jews in early nineteenth century Prussia to the recognition, beginning in the 1970s, of First Nations in Canada, the growing understanding of social exclusion, and especially poverty, as a social injury or misrecognition involving denigration and disrespect, and the Northern Ireland Peace Agreement. It ends with a critical conclusion: the line between recognition and misrecognition is not one that is easily drawn, precisely to the extent that the struggle for recognition is always asymmetrical, and the power relations that define it are unevenly distributed
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