LEADER 02958cam a2200301 4500001 99100968113506421 005 20230125124702.0 008 170105s2016 xx |||||||||||||| ||eng d 020 9781369218206 035 (MiAaPQ)AAI10167471 035 AAI10167471 035 (NjP)10096811-princetondb 035 (OCoLC)ocn973886148 035 |z(NjP)Voyager10096811 035 |z(NjP)Voyager10096811 040 MiAaPQ |cMiAaPQ |dNjP 100 1 Lechterman, Theodore Michael. 245 10 Donors' democracy : |bprivate philanthropy and political morality. 300 vi, 137 p. ; |c29 cm. 500 Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 78-04(E), Section: A. 502 Thesis (Ph.D.)--Princeton University, 2016. 506 This item is not available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses. 520 We commonly believe that citizens of a liberal democracy should be free to donate private property, particularly when those donations serve public purposes. The fact that philanthropy releases resources to the public benefit may support the thought that the state should afford it wide discretion, if not affirmative subsidy. Support for donor discretion faces numerous challenges, however. Since the claims of need demand special moral urgency, some argue that the state must steer donations toward a society's least well-off members. From this perspective, the fact that contemporary policies subsidize donations on an indiscriminate basis appears counterintuitive, if not unjustified. Another problem lies in the way philanthropy can convert wealth into public influence. Donations are a valuable way of expressing one's identity and advocating for conceptions of the common good. However, when donations serve to amplify the voices of those with greater resources, they appear to clash with a sacred democratic norm: that citizens are entitled to equal influence over their common affairs. Finally, making donations beyond one's lifetime can be a valuable way of caring for the interests of future generations. But it is also a way of imposing the wills of the past upon future persons, and restricting their own choices. Under what conditions, if any, must future persons honor the philanthropic intentions of the past? As a contribution to the political theory of philanthropy, this dissertation shows how the political morality of liberal democracy provides resources for resolving these conflicts, both in principle and in practice. 710 2 Princeton University. |bDepartment of Politics. |0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n82063509 773 0 |tDissertation Abstracts International |g78-04A(E). 856 40 |uhttp://arks.princeton.edu/ark:/88435/dsp012z10ws70c 902 st9 |bm |6a |7m |dv |f1 |e20170220 914 (OCoLC)ocn973886148 |bOCoLC |cmatch |d20230125 |eprocessed |f973886148