The Big Idea

What Is Contributive Justice?


A framework for understanding the moral architecture of our economy — and the lens through which Dr. Dawn approaches everything she does.

Who Gets to Contribute?

Who Gets to Contribute?

Most conversations about justice ask who gets what. Contributive justice asks a deeper question: who gets to participate? Work is how we find purpose, build dignity, and belong. When people are shut out, something far more than a paycheck is lost.

The Longevity Gap
The Challenge
The Longevity Gap

People are living longer, but financial systems still treat retirement as an endpoint. Millions face decades with no framework for continued contribution or security.

When Industries Disappear
The Displacement
When Industries Disappear

From textiles to manufacturing, entire communities have lost the work that defined them. What replaces it matters — not just economically, but morally.

Who Controls Care?
The Stakes
Who Controls Care?

Private equity is reshaping healthcare. Contributive justice asks whose interests are being served — patients, communities, or shareholders.

Community Wealth & Worker Ownership
The Response
Community Wealth & Worker Ownership

Anchor institutions — hospitals, universities, cooperatives — can be engines of shared prosperity. Contributive justice insists they should be.

Wealth Across Generations
The Future
Wealth Across Generations

The largest wealth transfer in history is underway — and it is profoundly unequal. How that wealth is directed will shape communities for decades to come.

Featured Articles on Contributive Justice

Faith and Wealth: Rich Dad, Poor Dad Revisited

Faith and Wealth: Rich Dad, Poor Dad Revisited

Rich Dad, Poor Dad is one of this generation’s most iconic financial literacy books.  Written by Kiyosaki and Lechter in the late 1990s, it has sold over 26 million copies and has been touted by celebrities such as Oprah Winfrey and Will Smith—not to mention...

What Theology Teaches About Corporate Responsibility

What Theology Teaches About Corporate Responsibility

As business people, sometimes we forget just how connected the world of work is to the work of God in the world. Without question, individual business persons are moral agents. However, based upon the accepted conception of the corporation, there is often a lack of...