Many have argued in recent years that the U.S. constitutional
system exalts individual rights over responsibilities, virtues, and
the common good. Answering the charges against liberal theories of
rights, James Fleming and Linda McClain develop and defend a civic
liberalism that takes responsibilities and virtues as well as
rights seriously. They provide an account of ordered liberty that
protects basic liberties stringently, but not absolutely, and
permits government to encourage responsibility and inculcate civic
virtues without sacrificing personal autonomy to collective
determination.
The battle over same-sex marriage is one of many current
controversies the authors use to defend their understanding of the
relationship among rights, responsibilities, and virtues. Against
accusations that same-sex marriage severs the rights of marriage
from responsible sexuality, procreation, and parenthood, they argue
that same-sex couples seek the same rights, responsibilities, and
goods of civil marriage that opposite-sex couples pursue. Securing
their right to marry respects individual autonomy while also
promoting moral goods and virtues. Other issues to which they apply
their idea of civic liberalism include reproductive freedom, the
proper roles and regulation of civil society and the family, the
education of children, and clashes between First Amendment freedoms
(of association and religion) and antidiscrimination law.
Articulating common ground between liberalism and its critics,
Fleming and McClain develop an account of responsibilities and
virtues that appreciates the value of diversity in our morally
pluralistic constitutional democracy."
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