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John Broome Selecting people randomly article When there are several candidates to receive a good, and there is not enough to go round them all, it sometimes seems fair to choose between them randomly. This paper considers in what circumstances (if any) fairness does indeed require random selection. It argues that a utilitarian approach to this question is inadequate, and it uses the problem of random selection to throw some light on the notion of fairness in general.

Selecting people randomly

John Broome

Ethics, vol. 95, no. 1, 1984, pp. 38–55

Abstract

When there are several candidates to receive a good, and there is not enough to go round them all, it sometimes seems fair to choose between them randomly. This paper considers in what circumstances (if any) fairness does indeed require random selection. It argues that a utilitarian approach to this question is inadequate, and it uses the problem of random selection to throw some light on the notion of fairness in general.

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