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The Precarity-Dignity Paradox

Addressing how economic precarity in retirement threatens dignity while maintaining agency and self-respect despite systemic constraints.

Zera
Why It Matters

Yacob's philosophy insists on human dignity even within unjust systems—but also demands reason about material reality. Many people globally face retirement precarity: informal workers without pensions, migrants without benefits, women with interrupted earnings. Rational dignity here means honest acknowledgment: some systemic injustices limit options. Yet agency persists. The precarity-dignity paradox asks: How do you maintain self-determination within constraints? Strategies vary across cultures but include: claiming whatever social supports exist, building informal community security (rotating savings, mutual aid), reducing expenses to match likely income, seeking delayed benefits if possible, engaging in productive aging. Yacob's framework rejects both denial (pretending precarity doesn't exist) and despair (surrendering dignity to circumstances). Instead, it's reasoned agency: understanding constraints clearly, acting strategically within them, and advocating collectively for systemic change while securing personal dignity now.

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