Explanation
Social Justice refers to the principle that all individuals should have equal access to rights, opportunities, resources, and social participation regardless of their social background, gender, ethnicity, class, religion, or other characteristics.
The concept addresses structural inequalities and seeks to reduce forms of discrimination, exclusion, exploitation, and oppression within society. Social justice is concerned not only with legal equality but also with the broader social conditions that shape life chances and social participation.
In sociology and criminology, social justice is closely connected to debates about poverty, education, labor, race, gender, punishment, policing, and access to political and economic resources. Critical perspectives argue that social inequalities are often reproduced through institutions, cultural norms, and power structures.
The concept is central to discussions about welfare states, redistribution, human rights, restorative justice, and criminal justice reform. Many critical criminologists argue that crime and punishment cannot be understood separately from broader patterns of social inequality and exclusion.
Social justice movements frequently advocate for marginalized or disadvantaged groups and challenge institutional discrimination, systemic racism, gender inequality, and economic exploitation.
At the same time, the concept remains politically contested. Different ideological perspectives disagree about what constitutes fairness, equality, responsibility, and legitimate forms of redistribution.
Theoretical Reference
Social justice is associated with critical sociology, political philosophy, human rights theory, and critical criminology. Important contributions come from Karl Marx, John Rawls, Nancy Fraser, Pierre Bourdieu, critical race theory, feminist theory, and restorative justice approaches.