Rawls' Theory of Justice
Rawls' Theory of Justice
Theory of Justice
Objectives
1. Explain why Rawls’s theory of justice is first and foremost a procedural theory.
2. Present and explain the two principles of justice.
3. Identify Rawls’s view of the relationship between individual and society, and his objections to
rights-based, utilitarian, and communitarian views.
4. Address Rawls’s omission of some of the most important issues of justice in contemporary
human societies, such as race, colonialism, health, migration, and the global environment.
Reading Assignment:
Rawls, John. A Theory of Justice. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap/Harvard University Press, 1971.
Commentary
John Rawls’s Theory of Justice (TJ) is the most important work of 20th century normative political
philosophy, and “Justice as Fairness,” the theory he defended there, is the most important normative
theory in the field. A philosophical work is generally considered part of political philosophy when it
addresses systems through which power is contested and exercised or resources are produced and
distributed. A work of political philosophy is normative when it engages moral questions about these
issues – for instance, how the exercise of power can be justified to those who are subject to it, or how
resources such as money and power should be distributed, or whether it is ever permissible to trade off
the lives and interests of some for the benefit of others. And finally, a work of normative political
thought is generally considered political philosophy as opposed to political thought when it abstracts
from the specific histories and institutional arrangements of particular locales, and attempts to isolate
its normative political questions as they might apply in any society, anywhere. Thus a political
philosopher might put the arguments of Aristotle, Hobbes, and Nussbaum into direct conversation as
though there were neither time nor space separating them. It was this tradition of debate – normative
political philosophy – that Rawls’s Theory of Justice rejuvenated and reshaped upon its appearance in
1971.
Justification
During the 17th and 18th centuries, philosophers such as Thomas Hobbes, John Locke, and Jean-Jacques
Rousseau adapted an older “Natural Law” tradition by using the image of a “social contract” to ask what
Even so, for over a century before TJ, the social contract tradition had waned, and Utilitarians and
‘Intuitionists’ dominated normative political philosophy. ‘Intuitionists’ are those whose arguments rely
on direct appeals to moral considerations such as justice or equality (34). For instance, an intuitionistic
defense of socialism might argue that equality of condition was more important than getting what you
deserve; but a different intuitionist could equally well defend capitalism by arguing that individual
property rights outweigh appeals to the social good. Rawls worried that these sorts of debates were
futile because there was no external standard for determining which set of ‘intuitions’ about justice was
correct (39). Utilitarians, by contrast, evaluate actions and social institutions by asking whether they
maximize well-being for all affected. For instance, a utilitarian might endorse a policy of fast economic
growth even at the cost of some people’s basic interests in the short term. Rawls objected that
utilitarianism is too dismissive of the distinction between persons (27). It’s one thing for you to sacrifice
a fun morning (by studying till noon) so you can have a fun evening; it’s quite different when
policymakers sacrifice your pleasure or even life so that others can have fun.
Against intuitionism, Rawls argued that progress in political philosophy could come, not from any great
new insight about the substance of justice, but from devising a fair procedure. To Rawls, the shift to a
procedural conception of justice brought numerous benefits, the first of which was that fair procedures
help us make decisions when we can’t agree on substantive outcomes. It is typically easier to see that an
election, a lottery, or a coin-toss is fair than it is to determine which of the outcomes is better on its
merits. Indeed, the justice of giving power to the winner of the election, or money to the winner of the
lottery, is purely procedural: the outcomes are right just because they derive from a fair procedure (86).
So in TJ, Rawls proposes, not to simply offer a theory of justice, but to describe a fair procedure for
identifying or choosing principles of justice for the distribution of the benefits and burdens of social
cooperation, and then to let the substantive chips of justice fall, more or less, where they may (120). (He
does insist that the procedure doesn’t work like a mathematical procedure or a logical deduction;
whatever comes out of his procedure must still be double-checked from the perspective of those who
are to live under the principles so chosen (499), as well as by reflecting on the system as a whole (579).)
Procedural justification has other benefits, too. First, a fair procedure makes it easier for everyone –
losers included – to live with the results. We can reconcile ourselves to unfavorable outcomes by
accepting that the procedure from which they arose was fair and legitimate. And second, by setting up,
not a static society that strictly distributes a fixed amount to each person or class, but rather a set of
economic and political procedures that play out across decades and generations (304), we can hope and
expect that over time, each of us, or each of our family lines, might take turns in all strata of society.
Traditional social contract theories are procedural theories that imagine everyone in a state of nature
choosing a set of rules that would make it worthwhile for them to submit to governmental authority.
Rawls has two reasons for rejecting the traditional method. First, although he agrees that each person is
owed a justification for exercises of power over them, he thinks that we should not start from the false
idea that we were once in a state of nature without government, or would go back there if there were
no agreement. But second, any starting point other than this phony state of nature would lead us to
skew the rules in our favor: if I am in the religious or racial majority, I can make the minority pay for
tolerance; if I am independently wealthy, I can resist any demands for redistributive taxation.
To overcome this dilemma Rawls proposes that a fair procedure is one where each of us is
hypothetically situated in an “Original Position” of equality where we know enough about people and
societies to choose rationally about basic social systems, but know nothing particular about ourselves,
our own society, or even our place in history (120). So what we do know are general scientific and social
scientific facts about the nature of human beings and societies; we know that we live among humans in
a situation of “moderate scarcity” – that is, we can all survive and thrive, but we have to work for it
because we won’t just receive manna from heaven. And we know that people tend to want things like
money, self-respect, social status, political and moral freedoms, and the opportunity to choose and
pursue their own life plan. What we don’t know is anything particular about ourselves or the specific
society in which we live: whether we are rich or poor, able to perform physical labor or give birth, a
member of the majority ethnicity or of any religion, and so on. He calls this situation of not knowing
particulars the “veil of ignorance,” and proposes that justice is whatever principles for governing our
society we unanimously choose from behind this veil (136).
Because each of us can “enter” the Original Position at any time – we do not have to time-travel back to
a past state of nature or move to an unsettled territory – we can ask ourselves the question of basic
justice whenever that question arises. And since each of us is represented in the Original Position, we
are not going to accept a sacrifice of our own interests just to benefit someone else. On the other hand,
because we choose from under a veil of ignorance, everyone would reach the same conclusions about
what justice is. If everyone chooses from under a veil of ignorance, then each of us has the same
information and preferences, and all of us choose identically (139) and unanimity is achieved.
And what, then, do we unanimously choose? Rawls posits two principles of justice; the first has to do
with what is to be held equal and guaranteed its “fair value”; the second has to do with what may be
distributed unequally. For Rawls, what is to be held equal is our basic liberties – liberties that make
democracy and an open society possible – such as speech, conscience, political participation, personal
liberty, and so on (61). Rawls thinks that none of us would be willing to give these up under any normal
circumstances, and nor would we be willing to have less of them than others.
But not everything is a basic liberty, and many things may be distributed unequally. For instance, jobs
and positions of privilege are inevitably unequally distributed, and Rawls also thinks it would make sense
to distribute goods like money unequally, provided the unequal distribution was good for everyone. The
question, though, is what kinds and degrees of inequality are acceptable? Rawls’s second principle
answers this by saying that inequalities of jobs and social status are acceptable if they are distributed
What do these conditions mean? Most fundamentally, opportunities are ‘formally’ equal when no one is
legally excluded from the job market or directly discriminated against; for instance, no rule forbids
women from working in important jobs (72). But this is insufficient if women tend to be hindered by
nonlegal social practices such as gendered childcare and homemaking responsibilities. Fair equality of
opportunity takes account of such inequalities that arise from social patterns. We can see that
opportunity meets this standard if, for instance, the likelihood that a young child will grow up to be
wealthy, or a CEO, or a parliamentarian, is no different whether that child is male or female, white or
Black, from a poor family or a rich family, and so on. If fair equality of opportunity exists, you would
expect a thorough re-sorting of people across income strata with every generation, with no patterns of
differential outcomes between any two salient social groups.
And what of these income strata? The second part of the second principle – known as the “Difference
Principle” – allows (or more accurately, requires) socioeconomic inequalities just insofar as these are “to
the greatest benefit of the least advantaged” (302). This is a strange phrase; it sounds like the poorest
are at the same time the richest, which makes no sense. But what Rawls means by it is that the point of
inequality is to create, as the saying goes, a rising tide that lifts all boats (298); and in the Original
Position we would choose whatever “tide” would lift all boats the highest. This is what he means by
“greatest benefit of the least advantaged”: if we compare all possible societies, we’d create the one
where the poorest are best-off compared to their counterparts in all other societies. However, it’s
important to remember that this principle of inequality is the third-ranked idea, behind the equal basic
liberties principle and fair equality of opportunity. So although we would choose unequal outcomes in
exchange for increased wealth for everyone, we would not allow inequalities to grow to the point that
our children would suffer unequal opportunity or that our political and moral freedoms were
compromised.
First Principle
Each person is to have an equal right to the most extensive total system of equal basic liberties
compatible with a similar system of liberty for all.
Second Principle
Social and economic inequalities are to be arranged so that they are both:
(a) [Difference Principle] To the greatest benefit of the least advantaged, consistent
with the just savings principle, and
(b) Attached to offices and positions open to all under conditions of fair equality of
opportunity (302).
Shorthand: when in the Original Position, design a society with the assumption that your worst enemy is
going to place you in it (152).
In a just society, our market income and personal wealth – and Rawls does think that justice requires
economic markets with personal property rights – significantly reflect past free choices that we and
others have made. Many philosophers – including “natural rights” theorists such as Locke, “classical
liberals” such as Hayek, and defenders of “meritocracy” – think that the relationship between free
choice and market outcomes is what justifies our holdings: in their view, I have a ‘natural right’ to these
things I own because I got them by using my own body in ways that neither coerced nor cheated others;
or I ‘deserve’ what I have as a reward for how hard I worked and how talented I am.
Rawls disagrees. What you have to offer, and what it’s worth, depends on what others have and need,
what people who came before you have invested in you and others, and the plans and expectations that
people developed in light of a just system of interactions. Rawls sees what you deserve as what you may
legitimately expect, given such institutions. He agrees that we all have important interests in controlling
personal property and in being recognized for our meritorious efforts. But how we should accommodate
these interests, and how weighty they are relative to other interests, are outputs of the theory of
justice, not inputs. Market inequalities therefore have a function: to incentivize people to generate a
surplus that can produce benefits and ease burdens for all. Relatively rich people can be said to
‘deserve’ their high incomes only because those incomes are generated by responding effectively to this
incentive structure in a just society – that is, a society that makes the worst-off as well-off as they can
be. And the scope of property rights is not ‘natural’ but instead depends on what justice says about
which things can be owned, in what ways.
But if we are deeply shaped by the basic structure, and even our capacity to put forth meritorious effort
is partly due to those social institutions, does this mean that each of us is merely an avatar of the
society? Rawls may be said to be following Aristotle, John Stuart Mill, or arguably Kant in attempting to
strike a balance between viewing the society as productive of individuals, including even their
psychology, and viewing individuals as morally and rationally free and independent. If the natural rights
and equal opportunity theorists went too far in imagining individuals as independent, certain
communitarians go too far in the opposite direction. Rawls views each of us as independent enough to
form and revise our life plan and values, and thinks it is important that each of us be held responsible for
So it is puzzling, to say the least, that TJ virtually ignores all of the most urgent problems of social justice
in the world around it. How could the central work of normative political philosophy, the greatest
achievement of the theory of social justice to emerge from academic Philosophy in the West, say
virtually nothing about racial oppression, migration, international justice, gender, the environment, or
the legacies of colonialism and imperialism? Notwithstanding Rawls’s inclusion of brief chapters on civil
disobedience, just war, and intergenerational justice, it is hard to believe this work is a product of the
1960s.
Some of TJ’s limitations may be endemic to “analytic” political philosophy, specifically in the liberal or
social-contract tradition – for instance, the emphasis on individuals, law, and the methods and
assumptions of neoclassical economics – and the consequent difficulty of addressing extralegal social
power, racial formation, gender norms, the Earth’s finitude, and so on. Other limits may be due to
Rawls’s decision to focus on “ideal theory” – rather than the more urgent task of “non-ideal” theory – on
the assumption that you need to know what target to aim at in order to know which social changes
would move you towards rather than away from that target. And still other limitations may be due to
the demographics and social structure of the profession of philosophy at the time, namely, that it was
largely an in-club of financially comfortable white men at a handful of elite institutions who mostly read
one another’s work.
A wide variety of these issues have been addressed in the philosophical literature of recent decades. A
concluding task for this review is to discuss how Rawls’s brief remarks on issues of “applied” political
philosophy, plus his philosophical methodology, did or could address these ignored questions. It is not
claimed that TJ’s methods would be successful in addressing them; debate in every area continues.
An early challenge to TJ had to do with international justice. Rawls imagined that the society in question
was “closed,” meaning that people enter only by birth and exit only by death, and the principles of
justice apply only within such societies and not beyond them. This seems to imply that Rawls has no
objection to staggering inequality across borders, or even colonial relations between states, just so long
Rawls would deny that his “closed” society assumption has to do with migration at all. Rather, it reflects
Rawls’s view of how the principles are to be chosen and justified. Those who don the Veil of Ignorance
must choose institutions they would be willing to live with, come what may. Suppose you were in the
Original Position and you thought, “If I come out on top, I’ll stay, but if not, I’ll leave.” You might then
take a gamble, creating a society with higher peaks and lower valleys. But worse, you would then be
choosing not for yourself but for others: for those left behind or unable to leave. Thus although it makes
it difficult to discuss justice in the context of migration and bordering practices, Rawls’s “closed society”
assumption was an attempt to ensure that principles of justice are self-imposed and hence freely
affirmed by each of us, and that we choose only something that we can live with. As for international or
global justice, many commentators have argued that – notwithstanding what Rawls himself says in TJ or
later in Law of Peoples – his methodology does justify a considerably more robust system of global
justice (e.g. Beitz). However, Rawls remained concerned to enable moral, political, and cultural diversity,
and worried that a uniform global basic structure would require a degree of socioeconomic and political
integration that would violate the equal basic liberties and fair equality of opportunity principles. He
thus endorsed a “global Society of Peoples” instead of affirming a uniform political and economic system
subject to the principles of justice.
Similarly, early critics such as Jane English raised the problem of intergenerational justice and the global
environment. To address this question Rawls prescribes that the Veil of Ignorance hide from us which
generation we are born into and how wealthy our society is. He thinks we would choose a “Just Savings”
principle requiring that each generation play its part in the multi-generational enterprise of achieving
and maintaining just institutions. In later work, Rawls revised this in line with English’s suggestion, so
that we would know our generation but choose a principle that we would want all previous generations
to have followed. It is unclear whether either formulation of the just savings principle could achieve the
unanimity across generations that Rawls’s method seems to require in order to produce determinate
results. Nor does either method enfranchise animals or the natural environment, thus ensuring that
Rawls’s system remains anthropocentric. In addition to environmental challenges that arise due to the
Earth’s finitude, other environmental challenges arise due to the Earth’s inevitable unpredictability:
earthquakes, disasters, pandemics, and so on. In the Original Position we should know that such
disasters are an inevitable part of life on Earth, and we would presumably demand that just institutions
be structured for ethical disaster preparedness, mitigation, and burden-sharing. It is not clear, however,
where if at all such a principle fits within Rawls’s two principles.
Now imagine a society that meets the standards of Rawlsian justice in the abstract, but women are
disproportionately at the low end while men are disproportionately at the high end of the distributive
scheme; or racial minorities disproportionately low and white people disproportionately high. Has
anything gone wrong, by the lights of Rawls’s two principles? Further, suppose that one reason for these
unequal outcomes is that young women or minorities in the education system tend to believe that they
are not “cut out for” the most lucrative or powerful sectors, and hence form preferences to pursue
lower-status and lower-paying positions, leading to a sorting that seems both unjust and yet perfectly
voluntary. Again: are Rawls’s two principles any help here?
Rawls suggests that, once out from under the Veil of Ignorance, we should be able to take any salient
social identity and check it for these kinds of systematic biases, and continually refine the “precepts of
justice” within the society in order to achieve and maintain background justice (307). But it will be a
challenge to fix these problems; liberal principles have a hard time addressing ‘unofficial’ social mores,
behavior patterns, and sedimented gender roles – all the more so if we have not worked out the
intrafamilial justice issues mentioned above. Even deeper problems arise in the context of historic
injustices such as colonialism, slavery, segregation, and the legacy of periodic flareups of intercommunal
terrorism used to keep these systems in place. If property rights or social capital are in any way
heritable, shouldn’t descendants of victims now be compensated by descendants of perpetrators? Could
a principle of intergenerational justice include a requirement to make whole, in some way, the past
victims of the unjust practices of the present state? And even more fundamentally: if we live in a settler-
colonial state, who should be choosing principles of justice for us – the wrongfully displaced indigenous
peoples and their descendants, the colonizers and their descendants, or all together? Whichever answer
we give here, we seem to be choosing a side in a debate that is itself about justice, and so the theory of
justice presupposes prior principles of just territorial control or what it is for us all to be one people.
Beitz, Charles. Political Theory and International Relations, 2nd ed. Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1999.
Bell, Derek. “Environmental Justice and Rawls’s Difference Principle.” Environmental Ethics 26 #3 (2004),
287-306.
Daniels, Norman. Just Health. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2007.
Mills, Charles W. Black Rights/White Wrongs. New York: Oxford University Press, 2017.
Okin, Susan Moller. Justice, Gender, and the Family. New York: Basic Books, 1991.
Rawls, John. Justice as Fairness: A Restatement, ed. Erin Kelly. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press/Harvard
University Press, 2001.
Rawls, John. The Law of Peoples. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1999.
Shelby, Tommie. Dark Ghettos: Injustice, Dissent, and Reform. Cambridge, Mass: Belknap Press/Harvard
University Press, 2018.