
New Books Network Andrew Lister, "Justice and Reciprocity" (Oxford UP, 2024)
Apr 5, 2026
Andrew Lister, political philosopher and author of Justice and Reciprocity, explores reciprocity in Rawlsian thought. He explains reciprocity as a limiting condition on duties and its tie to relational equality. Short segments cover reciprocity’s forms, implications for UBI and incentives, duties to future generations, and global justice.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Psychology Of Reciprocity Can't Ground Justice
- Reciprocity includes positive motivation, conditional cooperation, and negative punitive impulses, so it can't straightforwardly ground justice.
- Lister warns grounding justice on psychological reciprocity risks defining justice down to what is merely feasible.
Reciprocity Conditions Are Bilateral Counterfactuals
- Reciprocity conditions are bilateral and counterfactual: duties depend on assurance that the other would comply if roles reversed.
- Lister distinguishes these from mere fair-share caps and emphasizes conditionality reduces maximum costs owed to noncompliers.
Dignity Grounds Limits On Unconditional Duties
- Lister gives a dignitary rationale: unconditional duties risk subordinating people who only provide benefits without reciprocation.
- Treating equality as relational means limits on unconditional demands preserve mutual standing and avoid one-sided subordination.






