Michael Foran - Book Panel on 'Equality Before the Law: Equal Dignity, Wrongful Discrimination, and the Rule of Law'

Event date
11 June 2024
Event time
12:30 - 14:00
Oxford week
TT 8
Audience
Anyone
Venue
Faculty of Law - White & Case Room
Speaker(s)

Michael Foran (University of Glasgow)

Alan Bogg (University of Bristol)

We are very excited to welcome Dr. Michael P. Foran (University of Glasgow) who will present his new book 'Equality Before the Law: Equal Dignity, Wrongful Discrimination and the Rule of Law.' Cecile Degiovanni (Oxford), Trenton Sewell (Oxford) and Professor Alan Bogg (Bristol) will be acting as panelists.

Please find below the abstract of the book:

This book presents a defence of the value of equality within law which is neither purely formal nor an entirely speculative theory of justice. It does this by combining a theoretical with a doctrinal project.

At the theoretical level, it argues that there is a distinct and meaningful conception of equality before the law which can be separated from concerns of distributive justice. It therefore rejects the claim that legal equality is merely formal. Rather, it is grounded in the equal moral status of all legal subjects. The demand that individuals be treated in accordance with the principle of equality before the law, then, requires that they not be treated in ways that would deny their equal moral standing. This principle of moral equality is the fundamental normative basis of the rule of law.

This general claim is applied, in the second half of the book, to anti-discrimination law. It is argued here that the wrong of wrongful discrimination consists in implicit or explicit denial of the equal moral status of legal subjects. This is also a core wrong that the common law seeks to remedy via judicial review and is thus intimately tied to legality itself.

In the final chapter, these two strands are brought together to defend the idea that law is a public asset which must be directed towards advancing the best interests of those it governs. This kind of equality principle, one which sets the outermost limits of the use of public power, must look beyond individual rights claims. It manifests a fundamental commitment to substantive equality – understood as collective flourishing – without tying it to group-based distributive concerns which arise from distinct social and historical contexts and require the exercise of political authority to choose among a range of plausible options for their resolution.

We hope many of you will be able to attend!

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