Contestatory Cosmopolitanism

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Agent's Self-understanding
Agent’s Self-understanding
Agonism
Agonistic Cosmopolitanism
agonistic pluralism
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Conflictual Consensus
Contingent Strangers
Cosmopolitan Contestation
Cosmopolitan Imaginary
Cosmopolitan Justice
Cosmopolitan Law Enforcement
Cosmopolitan Legal Order
Cosmopolitan Policing
Cosmopolitanism
Critical Horizons
David Edward Rose
Democracy
Democratic Minimum
democratic participation
dialectical approaches to global politics
Dialectics
Empty Universal
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Ethico Political Principles
Global Constitutionalism
global justice
Global Legal Order
Good Regimes
Human Suffering
International Criminal Court
international law reform
James Bohman
James D. Ingram
John Rundell
Kafumu Kalyalya
Kant's Cosmopolitanism
Kant's Perpetual Peace
Kant’s Cosmopolitanism
Kant’s Perpetual Peace
Kevin W. Gray
Lars Rensmann
Mouffe's Framework
Mouffe’s Framework
normative critique
Objective Freedom
Patrick Hayden
political theory
Positive Commonality
Robert Fine
Standard Cosmopolitanism
Tamara Caraus
Unconditional Hospitality
William Smith

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138291140
  • Weight: 430g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Apr 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Contemporary global politics poses urgent challenges – from humanitarian, migratory and environmental problems to economic, religious and military conflicts – that strain not only existing political systems and resources, but also the frameworks and concepts of political thinking. The standard cosmopolitan response is to invoke a sense of global community, governed by such principles as human rights or humanitarianism, free or fair trade, global equality, multiculturalism, or extra-national democracy. Yet, the contours, grounds and implications of such a global community remain notoriously controversial, and it risks abstracting precisely from the particular and conflictual character of the challenges which global politics poses.

The contributions to this collection undertake to develop a more fruitful cosmopolitan response to global political challenges, one that roots cosmopolitanism in the particularity and conflict of global politics itself. They argue that this ‘contestatory’ cosmopolitanism must be dialectical, agonistic and democratic: that is, its concepts and principles must be developed immanently and critically out of prevailing normative resources; they must reflect and acknowledge their antagonistic roots; and they must be the result of participatory and self-determining publics. In elaborating this alternative, the contributions also return to neglected cosmopolitan theorists like Hegel, Adorno, Arendt, Camus, Derrida, and Mouffe, and reconsider mainstream figures such as Kant and Habermas.

This collection was originally published as a special edition of Critical Horizons.

Tom Bailey is Associate Professor of Philosophy at John Cabot University in Rome, Italy. He works on modern and contemporary ethics and political philosophy. He has published essays on Kant and Nietzsche, and edited Nietzsche and Kantian Ethics (with J Constâncio, London: Bloomsbury, 2017), Rawls and Religion (with V. Gentile, New York: Columbia University Press, 2015) and Deprovincializing Habermas: Global Perspectives (London: Routledge, 2013).