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Non-Renounceable Rights, Paternalism and Autonomy

SøREN FLINCH Midtgaard

Utilitas, 2015, vol. 27, issue 3, 347-364

Abstract: The notion of a non-renounceable right – that is, a right one cannot irrevocably relinquish – is an integral part of recent liberal reconciliatory attempts to justify apparently paternalistic policies, such as compulsory insurance or providing people with certain goods irrespective of their subjective preferences, non-paternalistically. However, non-renounceable rights cannot be justified non-paternalistically. A critical scrutiny of the liberal reconciliatory arguments in question reveals this and points towards a plausible paternalist justification of the policies in question.

Date: 2015
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