Publication: How I Would have been Differently Treated: Discrimination Through the Lens of Counterfactual Fairness
How I Would have been Differently Treated: Discrimination Through the Lens of Counterfactual Fairness
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Loi, M., Nappo, F., & Vigano, E. (2023). How I Would have been Differently Treated: Discrimination Through the Lens of Counterfactual Fairness. Res Publica: A Journal of Moral, Legal and Social Philosophy, 29(2), 185–211. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11158-023-09586-3
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The widespread use of algorithms for prediction-based decisions urges us to consider the question of what it means for a given act or practice to be discriminatory. Building upon work by Kusner and colleagues in the field of machine learning, we propose a counterfactual condition as a necessary requirement on discrimination. To demonstrate the philosophical relevance of the proposed condition, we consider two prominent accounts of discrimination in the recent literature, by Lippert-Rasmussen and Hellman respectively, that do not logic
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Loi, M., Nappo, F., & Vigano, E. (2023). How I Would have been Differently Treated: Discrimination Through the Lens of Counterfactual Fairness. Res Publica: A Journal of Moral, Legal and Social Philosophy, 29(2), 185–211. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11158-023-09586-3