Rationality, Markets and Morals

Studies at the Intersection of Philosophy and Economics

Rationality, Markets, and Morals: RMM 0 (2009), 309 – 325

On the Legitimacy of Political Communities

Abstract

The paper con­sists of two parts. The first part deals with the nor­ma­ti­ve legi­ti­ma­cy of poli­ti­cal com­mu­ni­ties, such as sta­tes and con­fe­de­ra­ti­ons, in gene­ral, i.e. their accep­ta­bi­li­ty in light of reasonable stan­dards of effi­ci­en­cy, com­mon good, and jus­ti­ce from the view­points of their mem­bers on the one hand (inter­nal legi­ti­ma­cy) and their social sur­roun­dings on the other (exter­nal legi­ti­ma­cy). The requi­re­ments of both aspects of legi­ti­ma­cy are spe­ci­fied in a two­fold way: as nor­ma­ti­ve ide­als and as mini­mum stan­dards. As to the lat­ter, a poli­ti­cal community’s legi­ti­ma­cy mini­mal­ly requi­res that it effec­tively gua­ran­tees the fun­da­men­tal human rights of its mem­bers and com­pli­es with cer­tain basic pre­cepts of a peaceful and gene­ral­ly bene­fi­ci­al inter­na­tio­nal order. On this basis, the second part scru­ti­ni­zes the legi­ti­ma­cy of the Euro­pean Uni­on with regard to its inter­nal and exter­nal aspects. This attempt leads to a mixed result. Even though the EU can cer­tain­ly be regard­ed, by and lar­ge, as a desi­ra­ble pro­ject, it also suf­fers from a num­ber of con­sidera­ble defects that wea­k­en its legitimacy.

Journal Information

RMM is an interdisciplinary publication focusing on issues of rationality, market mechanisms, and the experimental method of reasoning into moral subjects. It provides a forum for dialogue between philosophy, economics, and related disciplines, encouraging critical reflection on the foundations and implications of economic processes.