Philippe Van Parijs


Philippe Van Parijs is a Belgian political philosopher and political economist, best known as a proponent and main defender of the concept of a basic income and for the first systematic treatment of linguistic justice.

Early life and education

Born 23 May 1951, Philippe Van Parijs studied philosophy, law, political economy, sociology and linguistics at the Université Saint-Louis - Bruxelles in Brussels, at the Université catholique de Louvain in Louvain-la-Neuve, at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in Leuven, in Oxford, Bielefeld and California. He holds doctorates in the social sciences and in philosophy.

Career

He is professor at the Faculty of Economic, Social and Political Sciences of the University of Louvain, where he directs the Hoover Chair of Economic and Social Ethics since its creation in 1991. He was a Visiting Professor at Harvard University's Department of Philosophy from 2004 to 2011, and has been a Visiting Professor at the Higher Institute of Philosophy of the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven since 2006, and a senior research fellow at Nuffield College, Oxford, since 2011.
Van Parijs has also held visiting positions at the Universities of Amsterdam, Manchester, Siena, Québec, Wisconsin, Maine and Aix-Marseille, the European University Institute, the Russian Academy of Sciences, the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, the Catholic Faculties of Kinshasa, All Souls College, Yale University, Sciences Po, the Catholic University of Uruguay, the Autonomous University of Barcelona and the École Normale Supérieure.
He is one of the founders of the Basic Income European Network in 1986, which became the Basic Income Earth Network in 2004, and he chairs its International Board. He coordinates the Ethical Forum of the University Foundation. He also coordinates the Pavia Group with Kris Deschouwer and, with Paul De Grauwe, the Re-Bel initiative. He is a member of Belgium's Royal Academy of Sciences, Letters and Fine Arts, of the International Institute of Philosophy, and of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts and fellow of the British Academy. In 2001, he was awarded the Francqui Prize, Belgium's most generous scientific prize.

Work

Basic income

In Real Freedom for All: What can justify capitalism? he argues for both the justice and feasibility of a basic income for every citizen. Van Parijs asserts that it promotes the achievement of a real freedom to make choices. For example, he purports that one cannot really choose to stay at home to raise children or start a business if one cannot afford to. As proposed by Van Parijs, such freedom should be feasible through taxing the scarce, valued social good of jobs, as a form of income redistribution.

Linguistic justice

Another part of Van Parijs' work is about what he refers to as "linguistic justice". In order to address the what he views as the "injustice" arising from the "privilege" enjoyed by English as a global lingua franca, he discusses a wide range of measures such as a language tax which would be paid by English-speaking countries, a ban on the dubbing of films, and the enforcement of a linguistic territoriality principle that would protect weaker languages.
Van Parijs's work is sometimes associated with the September Group of analytic Marxism, though he is not himself a Marxist.

Political proposals