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CREATING CAPABILITIES
The Human Development
Approach
Martha C. Nussbaum
e permanent blacki
€ approach promises a new, and rela-
tively unified, perspective on problems that are often treated in
iéolation from one another, The list is to Some extent arbitrary:
other issues could easily be added. (Three that come immediately to
mind are migration, the Internet, and global warming.)
Disadvantage
Alongstanding debateAvithin development economics concerns the
right way to thi.
jut poverty and disdtivantage. Sen has long
argued that poverty is best understgod4s capabilit ‘failure, not just
as shortage of commodities or even of inco: id wealth( Poverty
involves heterogeneous failures of opportunity, which are not al-
iys well correlated with income; moreover, people in positions of
[ social exclusion may have difficulty converting income into actual
apenas fsCREATING mn vaenstuniniai ties
le not even a good proxy for capabilities. In
me is a means to aml end, and cal abilities are the end. WZ
h measuring poverty thro
res pertain to the household; a focus
he neglect of s& bias in nutrition,
ff poverty: Tooking at poverty in
ncourages 4 focus on how
ributional ine walities in
also been assertive in de-
izance of the value of un-
ing relative disad-
functioning,
} general, inco!
| One particular difficulty wid
a is that available income measut
Wom on income therefore encourages ©
lark health care, and other aspects of
“Jugetms of capability failure, by contrast &
‘Af each person is doin; and spotlights dist
e family. The Capability ‘Approach has
come accounts take CO;
rk, another key issue in assessi
ugh income
manding that in
+ * paid domestic wo!
en's work on capability failure grew out of his Nobel Prize-win-
ized that famine is not
nn famines, in which he emphasi
‘caused simply by shortage of food but is a matter of | lacking oppor-
of unemployment,
4 tunities to obtain the things one needs (because
Viki example). Its remedy therefore cannot lie simply in food relief or
| ware handouts. A genuine solution would require addressing the capabil-
frobfet ity failures of the vulnerable populations, by providing employment
and other sources of entitlement to vital commodities. This general
point has become a part of uncontroversial mainstream analysis.
‘The further step of thinking about disadvantage more generally
in terms of capability failure, though a natural next move, has not
always been taken, partly because the attraction of models that ag-
gregate across elements of lives remains strong, as does the attrac:
tion of using income and wealth as proxies for the different Tife-
VW opportiinities that people may or may not have. In Disadvantage,
we: Jonathan Wolffand Avner De-Shalit argue vigorously against reduc-
oy oS \’ ing all che elements of lives to a single numerical scale. They show
we that a approach that aggregates across the diverse elements of
oNcapabilities. In
saretheend. ~—
hrough income
sehold; a focus
s in nutrition,
at poverty in
focus on how
nequalities in
sertive in de-
alue of un-
lative disad-
‘I Prize-win-
unine is not
king oppor:
nployment,
od relief or
he capabil-
nployment
his general
nalysis.
. generally
e, has not
s that ag-
he attrac-
rene Uife-
ddvantage,
st reduc-
1ey show
nents of
a eae ERAN SCC RO a gy
ves
ives is bound co miss things of vital importance when one tae
ing to describe the situation Of disadvantaged groups and t
10
remp™ at sg ee aa
ropose strategies to improve their situation, Disadvantage, they ar-
gue is iereduibly Ptah. and is diferent aspects vaty toa signifi
cqncextent independent of one another and of income and wealth
This argument isin the spirit oF Sen’ views, buc itis more decrina
and elaborate, and therefore may convince People who have not
peen persuaded by Sen. Wolff and De-Shalit also show in further
detail why income and wealth are nor good proxies for relative dis-
advantage.
In connection with this general analysis of disadvantage, Wolff
Xand De-Shalit extend the approach in two ways. First, they propose
‘a focus not simply on the presence or absence of | key capabilities but
on their security. People need to have not just a capability coday but
a secure expectation that it will be there tomorrow. One salient as:
pect of disadvantage is thar, even when a group may have access toa
capability (employment opportunities, for example), that access is
very insecure. Second, although Wolff and De-Shalit remain com-
mitted to the separate importance of each capability, they recom-
mend a study of how disadvantages cluster, with one disadvantage
leading to another (corrosive disadvantages), and, correspondingly, of
how specific capabilities may be particularly fertile in opening up
others.
‘The fertility of a given capability, and the corrosiveness of a given
capability failure, are empirical questions whose answers are likely
tovary with time and place and with the particular problems of the
disadvantaged group. Usually, however, the variation means only
that some women, for example, already have capability security with
tespect to the fertile capability, not that it is not fertile. For Vasanti
and for many poor women, access to credit is particularly fertile,
145»
opening access f° employment, bodily-integrity fed Pali
ink that credit is not so inper Pas
icipation. We might thi
ool with a fuller educational background and a tree by
ial employment, who may have fewer worties on that a fe
actually, credit is 2 major issue for pray women, paticuly : .
end of a marriage in which the wife has not had marker = ;
ment, We can be sure thar domestic violence is corrosive al) Ploy,
world, and that few if any women enjoy full capability an
this regard. Wolff and De-Shalit find that aflition-haig , tn
portive and mutually respectful relationships—is particule S
in both of their’ countries, and we can predict that this is like
true elsewhere: isolation makes it much harder to achieve 2ything
CREATING cAPABILITIEg
‘ ak Sees.
Febardss -
Gender
In the york of Sen and Nussbaum, the Capabilities Approach ja
don the inequality of women. (Seeds of this emphasis cany
found in some historical predecessors, such as the Stoics, Snig,
Mill, and cube are two distinct reasons for this empha
First, these problems are of huge intrinsic importance. Women a
unequal in many respects all over the world, and this is an eno.
mous problem of justice. It is also a development problem, becaus
denial of opportunity to women holds back the productivity of
many nations.
Second, these problems are a theoretical litmus test, illustrating
vividly why standard development approaches (the GNP approach
utilitarian approaches) are die why the Capabilts
Approach does better. Onighe si 4F philosophy, looking at these
problems hows-some shortcomings of parts ofthe casi ibs!
146—z£ ae
CAR OorLITIRS AN DICONT Rdg oN A Re Issues
radition which has often i f the family as part of a “pri-
vate sphere” off-limits to social justice. (As John Stuart Mill pointed
out, this move was an inconsistency within classical liberalism, not
its natural outgrowth, since liberalism at its core is committed
to equal liberty and opportunity for all, Leaving the family uncriti- vt
cized was leaving a little piece ee ay uncriticized, and fives
ce subversive hierarchies based on birth or
scatus.) eer oe y-
My book Women and Human Development shows in detail how al-
ternative approaches in the development sphere, particularly utili-
inadequate in conftonting the inequality of women. It also ad-
dresses the obstacles to women’s equality caused by uncritical ad-
herence fo t (on. Religions are not always retrograde; when they
are, it is Usually in alliance with longstanding cultural traditions.
Nonetheless, because religion is a sphere of life thar deserves state
protection and concern, itis often cha sous Gita dilemmas,
as certain zeligious demands may run afoul of the demands of sex
equality. (re book makes a theoretical proposal for the resolution
of such dilemmas—arguing (as in Liberty of Conscience) that ample
space be given for religious free exercise and even for religiously
grounded “accommodation,” but that the protection of the Central
Capabilities always be regarded as a “compelling state interest” that
_/ would justify the imposition of a burden on the free exercise of reli-
gion. The Indian constitution utterly forbids the practice of “un-
touchability,” a central aspegt of traditional Hindu religion. This
may be a burden to some, but that burden, as Gandhi argued, is am-
ply justified by the or in eradicating discrimination. Sim-
ilarly in the United States, Bob Jones University lost its tax-exempt
147CREATING CAPABILITIES
status for forbidding interracial dating. The U.S. Supreme Court ar-
f eradicating racism justi-
gued that the compelling state interest Oo! :
fied the imposition ofa financial burden on this evangelical group.
Similar dilemmas are confronted in ee
Even if we deny that there is any sphere of human life that is “pri-
vate” in the sense of being immune To legal regulation, we should
.d spaces for the rotection of
also grant that free human lives nee
intimate association and for parental decision-making with regard
to children. Some issues are, oF should be, easy: we should all agree
that domestic violence and child sexual abuse should be aggtessively
policed by the state. We can grant that child marriage should be il-
legal and that marital consent should be carefully protected. We can
also grant that compulsory primary and secondary education are
important ways in which the state limits parents’ autonomy (for ex-
ample, the choice to use a child for wage labor). We can also proba-
bly agree that education should teach girls a wide range of skills,
giving chem exit options from traditional roles, and that their full
equality as citizens should be firmly conveyed to them, along with
the skills necessary for effective political activity. Other areasof free-
dom are more difficult: how far to give parents latitude to choose
homeschooling, for example, which may not fully convey the mes-
sage of equality. In India, government support for women’s organi-
zations that challenge traditional roles and convey a message of
autonomy and equality seems amply justified by the political im-
portance of the ae reason and affiliation (both
friendship and political particfpation).
mere work on Eel Sule is strongly linked to the
; i capabilities, particularly in thinking about the ways
iv which discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation expresses
stigma and reinforces a view that some people are not fully equal.
18CAPABILITIES AND CONTEMPORARY Issugs
Thinking about sexual Orient
list of capabilities makes us
fair,
tation through the lens of the whole
seek policies that are not just formally
treating similar People similarly, but that §0 deeper, seeking
out the roots of hierarchy and stigma and Fefusing to approve of ar-
tangents Ca OE germane appa of
inequality. Laws agtinst miscegenaon appeared to sone be for-
mally fair, because they treated both Taces similarly: blacks couldn’t
marty whites, and whites couldn't marry blacks. But the U.S, Su-
Preme Court understood that such Lay
and inferiority. So, too, do laws forbiddi
laws are sometimes defended as ley
to regulate marriage~in much th
their antimiscegenation laws, They are, however, unfair in a very
similar way, conferring a message of stigma and inferiority. Nor
does the remedy of civil unions 80 far enough. If states had offered
“cransracial unions” as a Separate legal category but continued to
deny marriage to interracial couples, we can see that, far from end-
ing stigma and hierarchy, such an arrangement would have rein-
forced it.
fe way that states once defended
bhai /Aging, and the Importance of Care
An urgent problem of justice that is only now beginning to be con-
fronted by modern societies is how to Promote the capabilities of
People with a wide range of physical and mental disabilities, Includ-
ing such people on a basis of equal respect requires not only practi-
cal change but theoretical change as well. Just as the full inclusion
of women as subjects of Politjcal justice tequired asking questions
(about justice inside the fatilly) chat had not been asked before, so
doing justice'to the claims of people with disablities requires call-
149=e.
ing into question a very fundamental idea of Classical liberalism,
namely, that the goal and raison d'éire of social cooperation is my.
cu vantage, where advantage is understood in natrow economic
pee whole idea of the social contract involves such a fiction,
and for this reason theories in the social contract tradition had
‘© postpone the problem of Aiabiliy ta alae peine teak Point in the theo.
retical structure, after society’s basic institutions had already been
designed. People ie are, however, equals who need to
be taken into account from the beginning in designing any scheme
of social cooperation. It is a long and intricate matter to show that
theories in the social contract tradition cannot answer this chal:
lenge by some minor modification, and that task, which forms the
primary substance of Frontiers of Justice, cannot be adequately sum-
marized here. Suffice it to say that the task of fully including people
with disabilities and supporting their human capabilites quires a
\Hnewaccount of social cooperation and the human motives forit, an
| yee account focused on benevolence and altruism, not just mutual ad-
tage. i
Now of course most theorists in the classical social contract tra-
dition did not believe that people were primarily selfish. (Thomas
Hobbes and his modern follower David Gauthier do believe this,
but they are atypical.) The reason for assuming that mutual advan-
tage is the goal of the parties to the contract is a reason of parsi-
mony: if a just society can be generated out of weak assumptions (in
other words, assuming not altruism or virtue but much less than
that), that is itself interesting, and one should always choose the
weakest premises ftom which one’s conclusion follows, rather than
saddling the theory with thicker or more controversial premises. It
is instructive to learn that the theory will work even if more de-
manding conditions are not satisfied. Rawls explicitly says chat such
150CAPABILITIES AND CONTEMPORARY Issugs
is his strategy, Locke, who ii
of his theory, thus has in ‘one sense a weaker theory than Rawls’s: it
will work only in special circumstances that May or may not Beas
My theory in effect Tetutns to Locke’s ticher Starting point esrcd
I believe that we need it to Teach a conclusion
‘normal” human beings experience as they age. As more Peoplélive
longer, every country will face a burgeoning problem of disability,
Sometimes the entire lifetime of a Petson with a disability is shorter
than the period of. disability in the life of a “normal? adult. So the
. problem of disability is vast! affecting vircually every family in every
society.
One aspect of this problem is that of. Supporting the capabilities
of le with disabilities on a basis of equal respect: What social
id economic support, what forms of work adjustment, what civil
and political rights, would be tequired to treat such People as full
equals? eae scholatship focuses on this set of ques-
tions.
The other key aspect is thinking about care work. Disability, like
ildhood, requires a great human investment in care, Currently, a
800d deal of this work is being done by women) and much of it
IstCREATING CAPABILITIES
he natural result of love. Care labor is
with a of gener based inca, SSE xe
Ee capped in other areas of life by the work they are a in the
fhome. Solving the problem has several aspect: pe ic sphere
Tneeds to support family and medical leave and in-home nursing
care, and nations’ health plans need to find some reasonable way
: icky issue of care at the end of life,
of addressing the politically er t
Ws faces need to become more flexible, recognizing the demands
Both women and men are facing at home: flexible scheduling, tele-
commuting, and other forms of adjustment need to be confronted
without panic. Finally, greater reciprosiey Between women and men
needs to develop, and society new conceptions of masculinity
unmanly such acts as washing the body ofan aged
4 Blteion
‘At the heart of the Capabilities Approach since its inception has
been the importance, of education. Education (in schools, in the
family, in programs for both child and adule development run by
nongovernmental organizations) forms people's existing capacities
into developed internal capabilities of many kinds. This formation is
valuable in itself and a source of lifelong satisfaction. It is also piv-
otal to the development and exercise of many other human capabil-
ities: a “fertile kote of the highest importance in addressing
disadvantage and inequality. People who have received even a basic
h - eee
education have greatly enhanced employment options, chances for
political participation, and abilities to interact, productively with
others in society, on a local, national, and even global level. For ex-
ample, women who are literate are able to communicate politically
that do not deem
mother or father.
152the individual.”
The United States has never given education the status of a fun-
damental right at the national level, though some state constitu:
tions have done so, Education does, however, enjoy a Privileged po-
Sition in federal constitutional law, One key case, Plyler v. Doe—
dealing with a law that denied education to the children of illegal
immigrants—asserted the importance of education in terms that te-
fer directly to human capabilities. The discussion of education be:
153CREATING CAPABILITIES
tal assertion of the equality of persons: “The
intended to work nothing less than the
and invidious class-based legislation,»
has a “pivotal role in
gins with a fundament
Equal Protection Clause was
abolition of all caste-based
Public education, the majority then wrote,
maintaining the fabric of our society and in sustaining our politica]
and cultural heritage.” Deprivation of education “takes an inestj.
mable toll on the social, economic, intellectual, and psychologica}
well-being of the individual, and poses an obstacle to individual
achievement.” Later these points are elaborated. Education is “nec.
essary to prepare citizens to participate effectively and intelligently
in our open political system if we are to preserve freedom and in-
dependence.” It is also crucial to individual opportunity and self.
development: “Illiteracy is an enduring disability. The inability to
read and write will handicap the individual deprived of a basic edu-
cation each and every day of his life. The inestimable toll of thar
deprivation on the social, economic, intellectual, and psychological
well-being of the individual, and the obstacle it poses to individual
achievement, make it most difficult to reconcile the cost or the prin-
ciple ofa status-based denial of basic education with the framework
of equality embodied in the Equal Protection Clause.” In effect, the
opinion sees the equal right to educational benefits as inherent in
the equal dignity of persons, given the pivotal role of education in
securing human development and opportunity.
In both India and the United States, then, as in’many other na-
tions, edyeation has been seen to be particularly central to human
\ dion equi and opportunity. If these connections are plausi-
ble, as they seem to be, then education deserves a key role in the
Capabilities Approach. doonls werte stipe}
‘The measures that go into the Human Development Index ac-
cordingly factor in education Seow urging all na-
154ye
CAPABILITIES AND CONTEMPORARY ISSUES
gions consider educational attainment one of the most crucial
elements of their national success. Sen’s profound commitment to
educational advancement is shown by the fact that he devoted the
entirety of his Nobel Prize money to Setting up a trust (called the
tichi Trust, named after his mother’s house in Santiniketan, the
where Tagore founded his famous school) to study and ad-
vance education in pest Bengal, his home state. The Pratichi Trust
An research organization, not a branch of policy-making, but its
scathing reports on educational shortfalls in the state shined a na-
tional and international spotlight on the failures of local gov-
ernment. In particular, its emphasis on such corrupt practices as
teacher absenteeism and “private tuition” (teachers tutoring afflu-
ent students for pay after school) has already generated some move-
ment toward reform: the powerful and formerly indolent teachers’
union has now taken a stand against these Practices.
Understandably, and to some extent rightly, the emphasis of these
interventions has been on basic literacy and numeracy; and it is
surely right to think that when these skills are absent many avenues
of opportunity are closed. It is important, however, not to confine
the analysis of education and capabilities to those skills. A true edu-
cation for human development requires much more. Currently,
_ most modern nations, anxious about national profit and eager to
__ seize or keep a share in the global market, have focused increasingly
on a narrow set of marketable skills that are seen as having the po-
tential to generate short-term profit. The skills associated with the
humanities and the.arts—critical thinking, the ability to imagine
and to understand another person’s situation from within, and a
8tasp of world history and the current global economic order—are
all essential for responsible democratic citizenship, as well as for a
wide range of other capabilities that people might choose to exer-
TSS———=—
CREATING CAPABILITIES
abilities Approach need to attend
an life. Users of the Cap:
cise in later li asking how both
carefully to issues of both pedagogy and content, ;
the substance of studies and the nature of classroom interactions
(for example, the role given to critical thinking and PP imagining in
daily study of material of many types) fulfill the aims inherent in
the approach, particularly with regard to citizenship. (Of course ed-
ucation for citizenship is not simply for people who are already citi-
zens of the nation in which they reside: the children of legal and il-
legal immigrants have a right to an education that prepares the
same adult capabilities as those prepared for citizens.)
Education is one area in which the usual deference to choice is
relaxed: governments will be well advised to require functioning
of children, not simply capability. Why is this case different from
most? Ic is different only when we are thinking about children,
whose choice capabilities are immature and who may face parental
work rather than to study, since they are economically
pressure to
ptions. Education is
dependent on their parents and have few exit 0]
such a pivotal factor in opening up @ wide range of adult capabili-
ties that making it compulsory in childhood is justified by the dra-
matic expansion of capabilities in later life. Where children are con-
cerned, then, the state’s commitment to the future capabilities of
its citizens, together with its strong interest in having informed and
capable citizens, justifies an aggressive approach: compulsory pri-
mary and secondary education, up to at least the age of sixteen, plus
ample support and encouragement for higher education, (Children
are also treated asymmetrically in areas such as health and bodily
integrity: we should tolerate less deference to individual—or paren-
tal—choice here than’ in the case of adults.) When we are dealing
with the education of adults who want more education than they
have had, persuasion is the correct approach, }
156SRS ABSUITINS AND cRaS
MPORARy
1Ssugs
. education requires sensitiy:
. req ‘NSitivity to Context, history, and cul-
Good A lot of the
based on the idea of
a fundamental decision:
y Proponent of the approach holds thar
Promoting capabilities will need
les count? Vircu-
all human beings
Beyond this, there are five basic posi-
and count as equals.
ne-aray take:
‘human capabilities count as ends in themselves, although
capabilities may curn ouc tobe instrumentally valuable inthe
n of human capabilities.
capabilities are the primary focus, but since human beings
relationships with nonhuman Creatures, those creatures may
r into the description of the goal to be promoted, not simply as
ns, but as members of intrinsically valuable relationships.
capabilites of all sentient creatures count as ends in them-
7——O
CREATING eat awn cartes
selves, and all should artain capabilities above some specified
threshold.
4. The capabilities ofall living organisms, including plants, should
count, butas individual entities, not as parts of ecosystems.
5. The individualism of -4 is dropped: the capabilities of systems
(ecosystems in particular, but also species) count as ends in them-
selves.
Capabilities ‘Approach may take any of
these five positions, and time ought to produce a vigorous debate
among them. Sen has taken no overall stance on these issues, al-
though he is concerned with animal well-being and environmental
quality. In Women and Human Development, I took position 2: rela-
tionships with other species and the world of nature are a human
capability, but one in which the other entities count
strumentally but also as parts of that relationship. This position
was an uncomfortable half-way point between position 1 (defended
by many people who have intense concern for human suffering) and
a position such as 3 or 4 (defended by many others who focus, as
well, on the goos.of other creatures). \ ;
is of Justice 1 defend position 3, at least where social jus-
Concerned, I argue that the idea of social justice is inherently
bound up with at least minimal sentience (the capacity to experi-
ence pain, especially) and with the accompanying capacity for striv-
ing and some type of agency. Intuitively, it seems to me that the idea
of doirig injustice to an animal makes sense in much the way that
the idea of doing injustice to a human being makes sense: both can
experience pain and harm, and both are attempting to live and act,
projects that can be wrongly thwarted. The notion of justice is con-
ceptually bound up with the idea of experienced harm and thwart-
People interested in the
not merely in-
158
osCAPABILITING AND CONTEMPORARY Issugs
ing, or so] believe. Thus it seer
a tree can suffer injustice—al
moral reasons,
'ms odd, at least to me, CO suggest that
though of course there may be other
oF Teasons of a nonmoral kind, that
to damage a tree, Similarly,
suffers injustice, although it ma suffe
many types of damage, and although there m; “a
ay be Teasons, both
moral and nonmoral (intellectual, scientific, e
about that damage. S
; uch intuitions are difficult to articulate, and
only time and future debate wi
intellectual, and other types of ethical
significance. It seems inaccurate, however, to say that the extinction
of a species is an injustice—apart from the fact that this extinction
usually proceeds by way of wrongful harms to individual species
members.
The Capabilities Approach seems well suited to address the
wrongs suffered by animals at the hands of humans, Utilitarians
have made important contributions in this area, but the general
shortcomings of their theory—its commitment to aggregation
across lives and across elements of lives, its neglect of adaptive pref-
erences—are handicaps in this area as well. Although committed
utilitarians like Peter Singer usually insist that the utilitarian calcu-
us will forbid us to inflict suffering on animals, this is an empirical
Matter, since humans derive a lot of pleasure (and employment)
from the food business. As with slavery, the whole matter of decent
159>
CREATING CAPABILITIES
rest on too fragile an empirical foundation,
id permit horrendous cruelty to a small
sake of human well-being. As for aggre.
gation across lives: animals pursue not simply the avoidance of pain
but lives with many distinct components, including movement,
friendship, and honor or dignity. It seems important to retain a
parate importance of each of these elements. Finally,
tilicarian considers not av-
treatment is made to
Certainly the theory woul
number of animals for the
sense of the se]
there is the problem of numbers. If the u
erage but total utility, the theory can justify bringing large numbers
of creatures into the world who have very miserable lives (but just
above the level of not being worth living at all), since that is a way of
Ps total well-being. But something like this is
augmenting the world’
what the food industry does, and we object to this because we think
thar it is wrong to inflict a painful life on any creature, even if chat
life is just barely worth living.
More generally, the Capabilities Approach sees animals as agents,
not as receptacles of pleasure or pain. This deep conceptual differ-
ence can help the approach develop a more pertinent sort of respect
for animal striving and animal activity.
The Capabilities Approach can thus recognize the very coura-
geous contributions of Bentham, Mill, Peter Singer, and other utili-
tarians to the animal-treatment debate, while insisting that a differ-
ent theory does better. As for theories in the Kantian tradition:
although Kant himself does not have very useful things to say about
animal well-being (he thinks the only reason not to be cruel to ani-
mals is that it will encourage us not to be cruel to humans), philos-
opher Christine Korsgaard has recently shown that an approach
rooted in the Kantian tradition can generate many of the same re-
sults as does the Capabilities Approach. The idea is that, according
to Kant, we have reasons to promote not simply our own agency but
160=
CAPABILITING AWy “ONTEM MONARY Is
Sues
also those aspects of our Nimality that ate inh
which we strive and act in the wor
But if we show respect to those
simply inconsistent, and a kind
to which Kantians are especially
toour fellow creatures, Korsgaar
Nerent in the ways in
tld: our animal nature, briefly pur.
(animal) Aspects of Ourselves, it is
of vicious self promoting of a sort
PPosed, to refuse the same tespect
d's approach is Still somewhat mote
myself favor: According to Korsgaard,
Ut Hs, and animals’ Tesemblance to 4s,
spect,
Not because of Something about
itis because of Something abo
that we should show them Tes
What are those conclusions? First,
ties Approach to make it Suitable for
expanded notion of dignity,
lives in accordance with hu
worthy of the dignity of a
expanded Kantian appros
well as derivative from dut
the Capabilities Appro:
we must modify the Capabili-
these purposes, We need an
since we now need to talk not only about
man dignity but also about lives that are
Wide range of sentient creatures. Unlike
aches, which see duties to treat animals
ties to support our own human animality,
ach regards each type of animal as having a
dignity all its own; the duty to respect that dignity is not derivative
from duties to ourselves, Although duties, as in the human case, are
first and foremost duties to individuals, the species plays a role in
Siving us a sense of a characteristic form of life thar ought colks
Promoted. The capabilities list, suitably broadened, still contains
the main items that we should favor, but we should be attentive to
161cmmaraaue CAPABILITIES
ae er enhpp
nity to live and act according to that species foEmio life. Although
choice is favored wherever the creature has 2 ganecny for choice, a
focus on functioning (akind of sensitive paternalism) will be more
appropriate in this case than in the Boman case.
‘as for the idea that we should leave animals alone when they live
in “the wild,” this naively romantic naturalism ought to be rejected
for today’s world. There is no habitat chat is not pervasively affected
by human action. Pretending that elephants in Africa are “in the
wild? is just a way of avoiding the fact that their habitat has been
encroached upon by human plans. Moreover, the only way to allow
them to have a decent shor at living well is to continue intervening,
but to do so wisely, not foolishly. (One form of intervention into
nature that seems crucial is animal contraception. This will mean,
for animals, modifying the capability list where reproductive choice
is concerned. While the first priority must be the protection of habi-
tats, even current habitats, well protected, cannot support expand-
ing animal populations. The alternative to contraception, the intro-
duction of predator species, seems much worse, from the point of
view of animal capabilities, than enforced contraception.)
The main conclusion of my approach is that all animals are enti-
tled to a threshold level of opportunity for a life characteristic of
their kind. Whether this means a total ban on the killing of animals
for food may be debated. (Both Bentham and Singer have denied
this.) The painless killing of an animal of a species that does not
make plans extending into the furure may not be a harm: this de-
pends on how we think about the harm of death, Therefore, some
authors deeply committed: to animal well-being are prepared to
countenance such painless killings, if the animal has had a decent
ni ut
ife of each species, and prom
162What is not Open for debate is the fact that the factory food in-
should be ended, as should hunt-
simulation, for example.
(not veggie-burgers,
can bea large contril
Artificial meat is already being developed
butmeat synthesized from stem cells);
ibutor to a more just world,
Slay to: presene Brrrmnynl?
ronmental Quality
this, too,
No matter what Position we take on the five choices outlined above,
the quality of the environment clearly plays a role in the Capabili-
ties Approach. We do not need to move beyond position 1 to argue
that the quality of the natural environment and the health of eco-
Systems are crucial for human well-being,
we think of human wel commitment re
generations. That vital issue has been extensively addressed in lib-
eral political the6ry (for example, by Rawls), but the Capabilities
Approach has not yet exhaustively pursued the topic. Getting clear
about how to count the interests of, subsequent generations of hu-
mans is of the highest importance for future work if the approach is
. This is particularly true if
163CREATING CAP AB ELE TEES
to be a serious playet in the environmental arena, especially since
the question of counting and discounting has been so well explored
in studies of risk and uncertainty, as well as related areas of environ.
al quality would be important even
Environment
the capabilities of people currently
es much more powerful when fu.
mental economics.
if our only goal were to support
living, bue the argument becom: awh
ture generations are taken into account in some way. So it is impor-
tant to determine the right way 0 do this-a challenge for future
workers.
Important recent work
fronting the questions 0!
iy, the Capabilities Approach offers distinct
approaches currently favored in environmental economics—in large
part because it encourages d
wide range of effects on different parts of human lives. For example,
considering impacts on health separately from impacts on the econ-
omy is important, since a single-minded focus on economic growth
might lead to the choice of policies that somewhat reduce average
by Breena Holland has shown that in con-
f environmental quality and sustainabil-
advantages over other
he disaggregated consideration of a
health status. 191) 60 9 i
| Holland’s isa purely anthropocentric approach, treating environ-
mental quality as instrumental to human life quality—not because
she necessarily believes that this approach is a fully correct one, but
because, in the context of public debate, it is useful to show that
very strong conclusions can be generated from premises that are
weak and uncontroversial, premises that most of the public can be
“presumed to accept. At the other end of the spectrum of possible
approaches, it is easy enough to see that a position that treats eco”
systems as ends in themselves, apart from the individuals in them,
could generate strong conclusions with respect to environmental
protection, Few people hold those positions, however, so arguments
164“question of population control, That issue has
CAPABIL
ITIES AND CONTEMPORARY Issues
of this sort are Not likely to have an imy
The question of environmental quality is closely linked to the
been at the forefront
of Sen’s work for some time, Sen rejects the dire predictions of ‘Mal-
thusians that we are facing an imminently impending food catas-
trophe. He does, however, favor major efforts to curb population
growth. This policy issue intersects with the theoretical core of the
Capabilities Approach, because many proponents of population
control have favored coercive Strategies that greatly reduce human
freedom of choice. China, and India under Indira Gandhi, moved
aggressively in this direction. Is this a tragic dilemma, in which life
and health are pitted against areas of freedom to choose? Sen doubts
that this is so, because he is (tentatively) convinced by the evidence
that empowering women (through education, employment options,
credit, and so on) is more effective in reducing population than are
Coercive strategies. At any rate, even if coercive strategies were simi-
Jar in effect, the intrinsic worth of freedom should tilt our choice in
165CREATING cog) wendy HALIETT IPEDS
del. Sen observes that the In.
aged population control very effectively
empowerment, and that this model is
thinese model and ethically
rection of the empowerment mo
ja has mani
and
bably) than the C
the dil
dian state of Keral:
by relying 07 education
both more efficient (prol
superior.
C Fonal Law and Political Structure
ities are central to the idea of a
-apabil
a conception of
and once we accept
(its basic political principles
em) as in-
Once we argue that certain ¢:
life worthy of human dignity,
the task of society's “basic structure
together with the institutional structure that embodies th
volving at least the securing of a minimum level of the Central Ca-
pabilities, it js natural to ask how a political structure can indeed
secure them: Sen’s work on the Capabilities Approach makes little
reference to law and to institutional structures within democracy,
although it suggests some obvious directions for public policy. For
my work, focused as it has been on the question of minimal social
law and political structure have been central from the be-
he account of Central Capabilities and of the
threshold as a source of political principles that can be translated
into a set of (minimally) just political institutions. I have particu-
larly connected the capabilities list to the part of a nation’s written
constitution (or of its unwritten ‘constitutional principles, if it has
no written constitution) that elaborates citizens’ fundamental en-
titlements. Many nations by now enumerate entitlements in a way
that connects them to the idea of a life worthy of human dignity:
the constitutional traditions of India and South Africa are particu-
arly ineeresting to study in this respect) "6 86"
© Recently, I have been engaged in work that makes the connection
justice,
ginning. I envisage ¢
166
—-uld require detailed i rete
a nt human capability, as law has Specified it through both con-
stitutional text and an ongoii ea
nts, then there is a duty to
secure them, even ifit is difficult to say towhom the duty belongs. I
argue that the whole world is under a collective obligation to secure
the capabilities to all world citizgns, even if there is no worldwide
Political organization. How to, sign the duties to specific groups
and individuals is a difficul® matter, and one requiring interdisci-
plinary theoretical cooperation, since history and political science
offer important insights about changing global structures. The dif-
ficulty is greatest in the global context, where there is no state and
no good reasons to think that we ought to have asingle overarching
state, Even here, many of the duties to secure human capabilities are
assigned to nations; but some belong, as well, to NGOs, to corpora-
tions, to international organizations, and to individuals, In that
sense the duties are ethical rather than political: they do not require
a state enforcement mechanism to be morally binding. _
Nonetheless, rights (or the Central Capabilities) have no concep-
167CREATING CAPABTEITIES
ty sanecion to government action. A long tradition, begining
‘Ache West at least with Aristotle, has argued thata key task of yoy,
ernment, and a reason for the existence of government, is to seciire
to, i central entitlements. As the U.S. Declaration of
Independence puts it, recapitulating a long tradition of argument,
“¢o secure these rights, Governments are instituted among Men, de.
riving their just powers from the consent of the governed”~and any
government that fails to secure basic entitlements has failed in its
most essential task. If a capability really belongs on the list, then
governments have the obligation to protect and secure it, using law
and public policy to achieve this end. The world context is unique,
because there is no overarching state, and thus none that can be
shown unjust because ic fails to perform this task, although it would
be right to say that the collective structure of world institutions has
produced injustice and should be changed. When we are thinking
of a specific nation-state, however, we ate entitled to ask whether it
has secured the Central Capabilities to its people. If it has nor, it is
not even minimally just. i
Sen attempts to avoid granting a conceptual connection between
capabilities’ and ‘government by citing’ examples of capabilities
(rights) that should’not be legally enforced; such as the right of a
family member to’ be consulted in all family decisions. Of this ex-
ample I would say: either such conduct is required by a notion of a
life worthy of human dignity or it is not: If it is, then it ought to
be legally enforced (just as we legally enforce prohibitions on child
abuse and domestic violence). If it is not, then it does not belong on
a list of Central Capabilities or human rights: If we do put some-
thing on that list we connect it, both practically and conceptually,
to the idea of the purposes for which“governments were instituted
Ipsoftn’) ala 30) 2adgn, peal
168,OS
CAPABILITIES AND CONTEMPORARY Is
SuEs
among men,” My own View is that
family members to be consulted jy
in decision-makin is a
concerning which citizens may reasonably re given a
ences in their comprehensive doctrines, religious and ethical. So
religious and ethical views emphasize fam; oe
the tight he Mentions—that of
Py exist, consultation (the policy
of just one group of religious and ethical views) should not be coer-
ten capabilities, then) are Soals.that Fulfill or correspond to
iple’s prepolitical entitlements: thus we say of People that they
are entitled to the ten capabilities on the list{ In the context of a na-
tion, it then becomes thie job of gover
lent to secure them, if that
government is to be even minimally jus
t.fin effect, then, the pres-
ence of entitlements gives governments afob to do, and acentral job
abilities to people. The exis-
tence of human and animal lives gives a reason for governments to
exist and generates obligations of'a distinctly political kind. When,
in the case'of the whole world, we decide that an ‘overarching sin-
gle government might not be the best way of solving problems of
capability-failure in poorer nations, government still plays a major
tole in securing them: the government of the poorer nations, in the
first place, and, in the second place, the governments of ticher na-
tions, which have obligations to assist the poorer. Giving people
of government will be to secure the cap
169c)R BpAKTDNIGE ICIAP ALBA WL ITET RIS,
what they are entitled to have, by virtue of their humanity, is a ma.
jor reason for governments to exist, and a major job they have once
they do. ;
When a given capability has been recognized as a fundamental
entitlement in a nation’s constitution (usually at a somewhat ab.
stract level), much more work needs to be done. The capability will
need further elaboration or specification, and the threshold will
have to be correctly set. Let us briefly consider just one major capa-
bility, in order to see how a constitutional tradition performs such a
task.
The history of the U.S. constitutional tradition regarding the
“free exercise of religion” provides a nice example of how a Central
Human Capability, abstractly specified at the outset, can be im-
plemented through constitutional law over time, with a deepening
and incrementally specific understanding of its requirements. At
the time of the constitutional framing, the Framers considered sev-
eral different sorts of language for what they wanted to protect un-
der this heading, but they settled on the following wording: “Con-
gtess shall make no law fespecting an establishment of religion, or
prohibiting the free exercise thereof.” For:the present I shall leave
our “Establishment Clause” to one side in order to focus on the
“Pree Exercise Clause.” .»)) ) 2), ¢011 | :
The problem the Framers knew well, by that time; was that reli-
gious liberty is always at risk when a majority of citizens belong toa
particular religion. Both belief and conduct, on the part of minori-
ties, is likely to be infringed—sometimes maliciously, but sometimes
also heedlessly, as when’a majority selects Sunday as'the day off
from work, ignoring the predicament of those whose holy day is
Saturday; or when a majority passes laws for compulsory military
service, ignoring the fact that some religions enjoin pacifism; or
170
™*—_ ee
CAPABILITIES AND CONTEMPORARY ISsuES
when a majority allows alcohol (associated with Christian ritual) to
remain legal but restricts hallucinogenic drugs, ignoring the fact
that hallucinogens are an important part of teligious ritual in some
minority religions!
In such cases, the idea of “free exercise” needs to be interpreted
aciously~-this means not just striking down laws that penalize
people for religious belief and practice but also looking at the prob-
lem of unequal liberty, special burdens that minorities face because
of their minority choices. Because the Free Exercise Clause was not
held to apply to the actions of local and state governments—where
most of the action is—until the twentieth century, we have relatively
few cases interpteting the clause from the early period, but we do
have plenty of evidence, from state constitutions and thei histories
of interpretation; that the idea of religiously based “accommoda-
tion” was a widely accepted norm. That is to say, when a law gener-
ally applicable to all imposes a special burden on minority religious
belief or practice, the minority in question may have a dispensation
from that law unless some “compelling state interest” exists on the
other side. For example; when policies involving work days burden
people whose holy day is not that of the majority, the state:is re-
quired to make adjustments. Policies involving drug use—for exam-
ple, the use of hallucinogens’ in: Native American. and. other reli-
gions—also appear to give grounds for a dispensation from general
laws, although there continues to be dispute about that question.
The classic compelling governmental interest that may be invoked
to justify a “substantial burden” is an interest in peace and safety,
though other’ state’interests, such as education, have at times been
tecognized as justifying a burden on religious practice, Administra-
tive burdens must be extreme to constitute a compelling state inter-
est, but the refusal of a Native American family to allow their child
17CREATING CAPABILITIES
to have a Social Security number a falls to a such a
weighty state interest. Ending racial Snes ee hela —
be a compelling interest in the case in ne a pures University
| lost its tax-exempt status for its ban on Ce eooey
One canonical statement of the accommodation aoe can be
found in a letter from George Washington, our first preside Pp
the Quakers about their refusal to perform peieeuygscrvices “Tas.
sure you very explicitly, that in my opinion the conscientious scru-
ples of all men should be treated with great delicacy and tenderness:
and it is my wish and desire, that the laws may always be as exten-
sively accommodated to them, as a due regard for the protection
and essential interests of the nation may justify and permit.” Wash-
| ington did not ask the Quakers to perform military service; nor did
he expect them, as John Locke would have, to pay a legal penalty for
; their disobedience. (See Liberty of Conscience, chapter 2, fora contrast
' between Locke’s view and that of Roger Williams, who favored am-
\ ple accommodations for the sake of conscience.) : ‘
; In the mid-twentieth century, this general idea began to be turned
into the legal framework we now use to understand what it is to
f ' implement this all-important capability in a way that Tespects the
equal worth of all citizens. Adell Sherbert was @ good worker in a
| textile factory in South Carolina In the 1950s,
I] sixth work day, and Saturday was the chosen.
workers were Christians. Mrs, Sherbert,
| Adventist, for whom Saturday is the ho
she refused to come to wotk on Saui
het employer added a
day, since almost all
however, was a Seventh-Day
ly day. She was fired because
itday, and she could riot findig that the unempl icy vi
ant , oyment pol;
her religious free exercise, In 1963 the Us, Supreme en
A és
Sherbert v. Verner, thar the denial of benefits by the state was a rig
ht to the free exercise of her religion:
ing Someone for Saturday i
a ty Worship. The
state, they said, is'not constitutionally tequired to give a.
ment benefits at all; once it does so, however, it May not make those
benefits conditional on a Person’s violation: of religious scruple.
They then articulated a general theoretical framework for the imple-
mentation of “free exercise”: no law or policy may impose a-“sub-
stantial burden” on'a person’s religious exercise without a “compel-
ling state interest.”
Those notions are still highly abstract: The case made it clear that
denying benefits to someone in a’case like this was a “substantial
burden,” but it offeredino definition of “substantial burden,” The
, Court also rejected South Carolina’s contention that the adminis-
trative difficulty of dealing with the claims of religious minotities
constituted a “compelling state interest,” but it offered no general
“account of that notion. That is the way our constitutional system
works: incrementally, as the Court gradually builds a set of railroad
‘tracks, ptogressively elaborating the conditions for implementing
the capability in question, and gradually articulating the contours
of 4 right. Following the full history of such cases would show us
how/éach of those notions has been successively, and more specifi-
cally, interpreted as new cases come along. It would also show how
New questions about the boundaries of this capability come forward
with new cases: For éxample, does the free-exercise principle give
parents the right to risk the health or life of their children? a think
about Jehovah’s Witnesses and blood transfusions) Can it be a
“substantial burden” when the government is simply doing some-
173CREATING CAPABILITIES
such as building a road (thus preventing
land,
ain sorts of ritual use of
bes from making certs
west Indian Cemetery, the Court found
al burden, even though the road dis-
‘tual purposes~because the govern-
owned.) And, on
thing with its own
Native American tril
the land)? (In Lyng # North
thar there was no substanti
rupted the use of the land for ri
ed the land, and was just using what ic
le: Is administrative burdensome-
if the burden is very great? Is
st, and, if so, what sort and
ment ownt
the compelling state interest sid
ness ever a compelling state interest,
education a compelling state interes
education? As such questions are answered, one case ata
amount of
ecome clearer, the railroad
time, the contours of the capability bi
tracks more extensive. This image should not suggest that there is
always progress: a good tradition may be rejected. It is relatively dif-
ficult to do so, however, in'a system that respects precedent.
As this example makes clear, judicial implementation of a cen-
tral, constitutionally recognized capability has several characteris
tics that we should notice in developing the approach further, since
they appear to be valuable in delivering an adequate specification of
aoe to people. In this sense it has a particular affinity with
Capabilities Approach: First; the capability in question is treated
separately, as something of importance in its own right, Although at
times the Court will look across to other rights, expressing a view
that protection in one area is necessary for protection in another,
this isa relatively rare occurrence. ‘The Free Exercise and Establish-
ment Clauses do have an interlocking history of implementation,
but that is because these are understood to form part of a single set
of guarantees in the area of religion. Even the Free Speech Clause of
the me amendment has a more or less completely separate inter-
pretive history. « nt 1
Itis certainly true that cap:
ebibatte WI ys FLL
fs form an interlocking set of en-
7%you servein the army,
for so doing.” In Peop!
a , in the confes-
sional was not told, “Answer, and we'll make it Up to you by giving a
nice donation to your oa he-was told that “the mild
and just principles” of th¢t4w would never put someone in “such a
horrible dilemma” by forcing him to choose between violating his
religious scraples and going to prison: “The only course is, for the
court to declare that he shall not testify... at all.” We can see why:
the priest was being asked to violate his conscience, and it was held
that this violation was tantamount to abolishing the sacrament of
the confessional. This problem would not have gone away had the
Priest, or his church, received a handsome cash donation. It just
doesn’t work to say, “Confess your secrets to your priest, secure in
the knowledge that, should he have to divulge them in court,
church will get'a handsome cash donation.”
The second feature of judicial implementation that these exam-
ples illustrate is its cautious incrementalism, building up a structure
through the years, as one case advances upon, or confitms and deep-
ens the insights of, another case, Often the contours of an abstractly
Specified right are exceedingly unclear at the outset. (The U.S. Free
Speech principle, for example, was long understood in such a‘ a as
Not to protect the speech of dissidents during wartime:) As time
your
175