Fairness
Definition: the quality of treating people equally or in a way that is right or reasonable. https://dictionary.cambridge.org/us/dictionary/english/fairness
Fairness is not
the same as justice, which as we just explored is focused on a means to resolve
disputes.
- Justice
means following a system of rules or laws, based on accepted standards.
The way these rules are made and enforced shapes how fairness is viewed.
- Fairness is often a judgment of how
those rules are applied.
- The Nuance: Justice might be a judge following the law
exactly as written, while fairness is the public's perception of
whether that specific sentence was morally right given the context.
Fairness vs. Equity
- Equity focuses on outcomes. It
recognizes that people have different circumstances and provides the
specific resources needed to reach an equal result.
- Fairness (in the context of equity) means
acknowledging that "fair" does not always mean
"equal."
- The Difference: In a classroom, equality is
giving every student the same textbook. Equity is giving a braille
textbook to a student who is blind, so they have the same chance to learn.
Consider an example of a fence around
a sporting event.
Equality: Giving everyone the same box to stand
on to see over a fence.
Equity: Giving a taller box to the shorter
person so they can see over the fence at the same height as others.
Justice/Fairness: Removing the fence entirely, so no one
needs a box.
Question: why is there a fence in the
first place? The answer
may be property rights. A stadium has been erected to host the event with fee
paying attendance to help defray the costs of running the event. An additional
question may be the exclusion of free viewing. Property rights change the
circumstances.
|
Concept |
Primary
Goal |
View of
"Fair" |
|
Equality |
Uniformity |
Everyone gets
the same thing. |
|
Equity |
Result/Outcome |
Everyone gets
what they need to succeed. |
|
Justice |
Systemic
Integrity |
Fixing the
system so barriers don't exist. |
|
Fairness |
Moral
Judgment |
The quality
of being impartial and just. |
.
Fairness is at its core related to distribution -who gets what, in what manner and can there be any redress?
There are types of fairness.
- Procedural
Fairness (Process): Concerns the methods by which decisions are made.
Individuals are generally more likely to accept an unfavorable result if
they perceive that the rules have been applied
consistently and that they were provided the
opportunity to express their perspectives during the process.
- Interactional Fairness (Treatment): Focuses on the human element—whether individuals are treated with dignity, respect, and honesty during an interaction.
Access to education
is often a major factor in the perceived Fairness of a society. Reading is the primary equalizer as so
much more information and self-teaching are available when literacy reaches the
required proficiency. It is how you can read this blog, which is why
literacy rates are a critical factor. It is also a means to keep certain
subsections of a population limited in their opportunities. Relatively
unhindered information availability lets people make their own choices, but
that information must be available and reliable.
Startups and Wealth Creation
A new venture (a startup) is often an innovative approach to create economic value. It is often a high-risk endeavor. Applying fairness to human elements includes their contribution to success. Fairness here is a tradeoff between immediate income (salary) and future wealth (equity in the sense of startup stock – “sweat equity”).
These concepts link to other sections of this blog written in the last year and a half, from “Value and Worth” forward. "Distribution of Wealth and Income" has only cursorily been touched on in “Wealth Inequality and Why It Matters” but “Wealth Distribution Can Be Unstable” outlines the consequences of (often revolution) of unstable wealth distribution modes. In other words, historically if the distribution is viewed as grossly unfair revolution has resulted.
|
Model |
Fairness
Logic |
Best For |
|
Equal
Split |
Equality
principle: All
founders are equally "all in." |
Close-knit
teams with identical risk profiles. |
|
Junior
Co-founder |
Equity
principle:
Rewards the "prime mover" more than later helpers. |
One clear
visionary bringing on specialists later. |
|
Employee
Stock Options (ESOP) |
Wealth
participation:
Aligns employee success with company success. |
Scaling
teams that need to attract top talent without cash. |
Gemini table
Fairness even in technology can be subject to bias. The data used often is historical, so previous outcomes bias the likelihood of success of any search. Historically white men dominated all positions of power in western society. If one searches for an employee based on statistics, other races and gender may be at a disadvantage for future recommendations.
Specific example: An algorithm used by US hospitals to predict which patients needed extra medical care underestimated the needs of Black patients. It relied on healthcare cost history, which did not account for systemic differences in how Black and white patients pay for healthcare, resulting in less care for Black patients.
Other areas in the following table sourced from Co-Pilot.
|
Example Area |
Bias Manifestation |
Mitigation Strategies |
|
Criminal
Justice |
Racial bias
in risk assessment |
Diverse data,
transparency, audits |
|
Healthcare |
Underestimating
minority needs |
Data audits,
fairness-aware models |
|
Hiring/Recruitment |
Gender bias
in candidate selection |
Human
oversight, diverse datasets |
|
Facial
Recognition |
Misidentification
of minorities |
Data base
underrepresented minorities |
Humans invented Sovereignty → Rights → Justice → Property → Fairness. They all fit together but in one’s mind they do not follow sequentially. Fairness is the human reasoning capacity to see if this is all in balance. It is most often a subjective matter but based on objective observation. There is not a single method of applying Fairness. Justice is said to be blind. Fairness has its eyes wide open. There is much more to consider.
Gemini created (note all people are white)
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