Global Inequality and the Fracture of (Proactive) Solidarity

Author:

Bertomeu Maria Julia1

Affiliation:

1. Instituto de Filosofía Alejandro Korn, Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, Universidad de Buenos Aires, Buenos Aires C1406CQJ, Argentina

Abstract

In this paper, I wish to examine what is meant by this new concept of “international solidarity”. The study will be presented in a number of sections, beginning with a general introduction that sets out the problem and emphasizes the importance of the document produced by the United Nations Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination. I will then detail certain general characteristics of the normative concept of solidarity and clarify a number of methodological assumptions and historical data. Thirdly, I will forward an in-depth discussion on the analysis of and debate around the concept of solidarity in its bioethical context, both prior to and during the pandemic. Finally, I will attempt to analyze what I call the ‘rhetoric of solidarity’, as set forth by international organizations and political leaders of the Global North during the pandemic, understanding it as aid in the face of the morally objectionable global inequality and injustice caused by a number of factors, the principal one being the current system of patents imposed by the WTO and the conversion of vaccines into commodities and even ‘positional goods’.

Funder

The project “La solidaridad en bioética (SOLBIO)”

The Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

History and Philosophy of Science,Philosophy

Reference21 articles.

1. (2022, May 03). Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination 106th Session 11–20 April 2022. Statement on the Lack of Equitable and Non-Discriminatory Access to COVID-19 Vaccines. Available online: https://tbinternet.ohchr.org/_layouts/15/treatybodyexternal/Download.aspx?symbolno=INT%2fCERD%2fSWA%2f9548&Lang=en.

2. (2022, May 23). Centro de Estudios Legales y Sociales de Argentina (CELS): UN Committee Decries Racial Discrimination in Global COVID-19 Vaccine Access. Available online: https://www.cels.org.ar/web/en/2022/05/un-committee-decries-racial-discrimination-in-global-covid-19-vaccine-access-2/.

3. Sandel, M. (2013). What Money Can’t Buy? The Moral Limitis of Markets, Penguin.

4. Puyol, A. (2019). Political Fraternity: Democracy beyond Freedom and Equality, Routledge.

5. Bayertz, K. (1999). Solidarity, Springer.

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