Abstract
AbstractIn this article, I explore the implications of three moral grounds for the justification of supported voting – respect as opacity, respect as equal status, and respect as political care. For each ground, I ask whether it justifies surrogate voting for voters unable to either communicate or give effect to their electoral judgments, due to some cognitive or communicative disability. (Henceforth: incommunicability cases.) I argue that respect as opacity does not permit surrogate voting, and equal status does not justify such support – although the latter account can make sense of the value loss involved in the persistent non-participation of individuals with cognitive and communicative disabilities. Finally, I argue that an account of supported voting based on the ethics of political care can accommodate a pro tanto moral permission to provide surrogate voting as a form of support in incommunicability cases, and it can account for the inclusive approach of the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities to supported decision-making. However, I show that in incommunicability cases, what the political community and individual caretakers ultimately owe to adult fellow citizens as equal members of the political community is some adequate form of political care – but not necessarily surrogate voting.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science
Reference49 articles.
1. Afsahi, A. (2020) Disabled lives in deliberative systems. Political Theory 48(6): 751–776.
2. Agran, M., MacLean, W.E., Jr. and Arden Kitchen, K.A. (2015) “I never thought about it”: Teaching people with intellectual disability to vote. Education and Training in Autism and Developmental Disabilities 50(4): 388–396.
3. Agran, M., MacLean, W.E., Jr. and Arden Kitchen, K.A. (2016) ‘“My voice counts, too”’: Voting participation among individuals with intellectual disability. Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities 54(4): 285–294.
4. Arstein-Kerslake, A. (2017) Restoring Voice to People with Cognitive Disabilities: Realizing the Right to Equal Recognition before the Law. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
5. Arstein-Kerslake, A. and Flynn, E. (2017) The right to legal agency: Domination, disability and the protections of Article 12 of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. International Journal of Law in Context 13(1): 22–38.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献