Critiquing capabilities: The distractions of a beguiling concept

TitleCritiquing capabilities: The distractions of a beguiling concept
Publication TypeJournal Article
AuthorsDean, Hartley
JournalCritical Social Policy
Volume29
Issue2
Pagination261-278
ISSN0261-0183
AbstractThe article provides a critique of the concept of `capabilities', initially advanced by Amartya Sen. The concept has directly influenced the workings of both the international United Nations Development Programme and the UK's domestic Equality and Human Rights Commission. It is argued that it is essentially a liberal-individualist concept. Despite its attractions — which the article acknowledges — the `capability approach' obscures or neglects three key realities: the constitutive nature of human interdependency; the problematic nature of the public realm; and the exploitative nature of capitalism. The article argues for an emancipatory politics of needs interpretation that would be better served by a discourse of rights than a discourse of capabilities.
URLhttps://doi.org/10.1177/0261018308101629
DOI10.1177/0261018308101629
Short TitleCritiquing capabilities