The term social justice is regularly used but rarely defined. It often means
a government program is on the way. “Social justice requires an increase in the
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (food stamps).” It can mean a general
concern. “The status of women is a matter of social justice.” It can describe
an event. “We went to a social justice conference.” Or describe a personality
type. “She’s a social justice warrior.” In many circles it is simply
substituted for the word charity.
“Our parish food pantry is a social justice effort.”
Social justice actually has a Catholic pedigree and
refers to a type under the general term justice.
There is criminal justice, distributive justice (the duty of government),
individual justice or commutative justice (fair exchange either implied or in a
contract) and social justice (and more).
Fr. Luigi Taparelli, SJ (1793-1862) of
Italy coined the term social justice in 1845. He was rightly worried about individualistic
tendencies that characterize modernity--all the more extreme in our day.
Taparelli favored an organic society in which many interdependent parts added
up to more than their sum. Such a society needs healthy intermediate
institutions that give individuals wider agency and also buffer individuals
from big forces—families, parishes, workplace units, professional associations,
ethnic clubs and more. This dynamic is called subsidiarity in Catholicism.
By about 1900 Catholic philosophers
were equating social justice with what St. Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274) calls legal justice. Now, for Aquinas legal
justice does not refer to what is approximated on TV shows like Chicago P.D. and Judge Judy. He means that by divine law all the parts of an organic
society must be directed toward the common good, not entirely to one
individual’s good. The 20th century Ctholic philosophers thought the
term social justice was better than legal justice because many people think the
word legal only means what is
expressly prohibited or commanded. Such people stay within minimum behavior but
consider social obligations to be strictly optional. In fact, they often expect
some recognition when they help out in the community.
The academic conversation continued,
treating both process and outcome. Process: How does social justice come about?
Outcome: What does a social justice society look like?
Fr. William Ferree, SM (1905-1985) of
Ohio greatly clarified the topic—in my opinion. First in a dissertation and
then in an influential 1948 booklet, Introduction
to Social Justice, Ferree said the unique act of social justice is
organization and its outcome is improved policies or institutions.
This means that social justice is a
virtue. It is something that is done, not a fond wish. It is more than calling
out a problem. Like all virtues, it must be done habitually.
This means that social justice is a
collective virtue. An individual can be generous, but cannot alone practice
social justice. Like-minded people must get together. Thus, mixed motives are
always involved. Each participant gets something out of the effort; the group also
benefits in some way; but the greater good is a primary object of the practice.
This means that the aims of social
justice must stay in the practical realm, though the initial ambition can reach
beyond what will be achieved. Compromise is a necessary part of social justice.
It is not a virtue for purists or utopians.
This means, to paraphrase a great
polka song: In heaven there is no social justice; that’s why we do it here. In
heaven there is perfect love, but in our messy here-and-now domain things are
incremental. There’s need for social justice today and more need tomorrow.
This means that social justice is for
insiders. Protest is often necessary to get inside, but marches and rallies are
not in themselves social justice.
This means that social justice is not
charity, though charity might precede or accompany social justice. Charity in
itself does not change policies, though people involved in charity often turn
to lobbying (social justice) in order to make charity more efficient or even
less necessary.
Social justice is a specific activity
done by a group within an institution to improve a policy or, if necessary, to
start an alternative institution. With a better appreciation for the definition
of social justice more might be accomplished. As Elvis sang in 1968, “A little
less conversation, a little more action.”
Ferree’s booklet ($6) and Droel’s
booklet, What Is Social Justice ($5)
can be obtained from National Center for the Laity (PO Box 291102, Chicago, IL
60629).