Privileged Citizens and the Right to Riot

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Abstract

<jats:p>Avia Pasternak’s account of permissible political rioting includes a constraint that insists only oppressed citizens, and not privileged citizens, are permitted to riot when rioting is justified. This discussion note argues that Pasternak’s account, with which I largely agree, should be expanded to admit the permissibility of privileged citizens rioting alongside and in solidarity with oppressed citizens. The permissibility of privileged citizens participating in riots when rioting is justified is grounded in the notions that it is sometimes necessary, in accordance with Pasternak’s necessity condition, and that it will oftentimes substantially improve the chances of successfully achieving the just aims the rioting seeks to achieve, in accordance with Pasternak’s success condition. Allowing for this improves Pasternak’s already strong account of permissible political rioting on its own terms.</jats:p>

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10.26556/jesp.v26i3.3086

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Carnes, Thomas (n.d.). Privileged Citizens and the Right to Riot. Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy, 26(3). 10.26556/jesp.v26i3.3086 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/31540.

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Carnes

Thomas Carnes

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I am a second-year PhD student. I am a Major in the Army who has been selected to be an Academy Professor at the United States Military Academy at West Point upon completion of my PhD, where I will teach for the remainder of my Army career. I am broadly interested in social and political philosophy. I am originally from Virginia Beach, VA, am married to my best friend, Lyndsay, and have a daughter (Chloe) and a son (Owen). I enjoy spending time with my family, eating good food and drinking good wine with Lyndsay, reading, playing boardgames, and watching sports.


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