This paper is a plea for the study of ‘local justice’, i.e. the allocation by institutions of scarce goods and necessary burdens. It is largely programmatic, with few new findings to report. Later, case studies which are currently being carried out in West Germany, France, Norway and the United States will provide answers to some of the questions raised below.
(1) Since the exemption from a burden (e.g. from military service) can always be viewed as a good, I shall henceforward refer only to the allocation of scarce goods.
(2) For one such case study, see, in this issue, Herpin, Nicolas, le don du sperme, Archives européennes de sociologie, XXXI (1990), 141–173.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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(4) Useful comparative studies of singlearena issues in different countries include Yemin, E. (ed.), Workforce Reductions in Undertaking (Geneva, International Labour Office, 1982)Google Scholar and Aaron, H. J. and Schwartz, W. B., The Painful Prescription (Washington, D.C., The Brookings Institution, 1984)Google Scholar. The first of these compares layoff policies in seven industrialized countries, the second allocation of medical goods in the United States and Britain. Within-country comparisons of several arenas are virtually non-existent. Nobody, for instance, seems to have compared the process of being exempted from military service with the process of being admitted to college in the United States. A fortiori, simultaneous comparisons of countries and arenas have, to my knowledge, never been carried out.
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(7) Although the medical literature is divided, this statement appears to remain true even after the introduction of cyclosporin. See notably Opelz, , Allocation of cadaver kidneys for transplantation, Transplantation Proceedings, XX (1988), 1028–32.Google Scholar
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(9) H. P. Young, On the use of priority formulas for determining organ transplant recipients, unpublished manuscript, 1988.
(10) Antibody formation and antigen matching do not vary independently of each other. ‘Widely reacting cytotoxic antibodies often have specificity against the class 1 antigens of the A and B histocompatibility loci; because of this, the demonstration of a negative cytotoxic cross match for a highly sensitized patient should predict a good antigen match. Thus, the antibody and antigen credits tend to be reinforcing’. (Starzl, T.E. et al. , A multifactorial system for equitable selection of cadaver kidney recipients, Journal of the American Medical Association, CCLVII (1987), 3073–75.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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(18) For an extensive survey of the use of lotteries to allocate resources, see Ch. II of my Solomonic Judgements (Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1989).Google Scholar
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(21) See U.S. Department of State, Bureau of Consular Affairs, Visa Bulletin Number 19, Volume VI (1989).
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* The research reported in this article has been supported by a grant from the Russell Sage Foundation.