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Index
Cover Page
Title Page
Copyright Page
Contents
Preface
1. Introduction: Liberalism and the Accommodation of Cultural Diversity
1.1. Competing Interpretations of Liberalism
1.2. Why the Case for Liberal Culturalism Needs to Be Restated
1.3. Four Distinctions, Plus One More
1.4. The Main Argument of the Book
1.5. Overview
2. Rethinking Culture: The Social Lineage Account
2.1. The Dilemma of Essentialism
2.2. The Critique of Essentialism
2.3. Cultural Continuity
2.4. The Social Lineage Account
2.5. Some Related Concepts
2.6. The Normative Significance of Culture: A First Glance
3. Why Does Culture Matter?
3.1. Options Disadvantage
3.2. Culture as Context of Choice
3.3. The Access Account
3.4. The Adequacy Account
3.5. Cultural Preservation versus Fair Treatment of Cultures
4. Liberal Neutrality: A Reinterpretation and Defense
4.1. An Unfashionable Idea
4.2. Neutrality as a Downstream Value
4.3. Conceptions of Neutrality
4.4. Institutions of Neutrality
4.5. The Fairness Justification of Neutrality
4.6. The Value of Self-Determination
4.7. Fairness and Neutral Treatment
5. Equal Recognition
5.1. Justice and Cultural Decline: Three Views
5.2. Recognition
5.3. Recognition and Justice
5.4. Equal Recognition versus Liberal Nationalism
5.5. The Objection from Expensive Tastes
5.6. Is Full Proceduralism Enough?
6. Equal Recognition and Language Rights
6.1. Linguistic Diversity and Language Rights
6.2. Three Kinds of Language Rights
6.3. Two Models: Nation Building and Language Preservation
6.4. The Equal Recognition Model
6.5. The Case for Equal Recognition
6.6. The Nation-Building Challenge
6.7. The Language Preservation Challenge—Weak Versions
6.8. The Language Preservation Challenge—Stronger Versions
6.9. Equal Recognition versus the Territoriality Principle
7. Democratic Secession from a Multinational State
7.1. Theories of Secession
7.2. The Failure-of-Recognition Condition
7.3. The Equal Recognition of National Identity
7.4. The Democracy Argument
7.5. The Confederal Alternative
7.6. Practical Implications
8. Immigrants, National Minorities, and Minority Rights
8.1. The Immigrant/National Minority Dichotomy
8.2. How Voluntary Is the Decision to Emigrate?
8.3. Are Cultural Rights Alienable?
8.4. Is the Receiving Society Acting Permissibly?
8.5. The Limits of Voluntary Acceptance
References
Index
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