Global Justice

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Altruistic Lives
Basic Structure Argument
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Category=JPS
Civil Society
Collective Beneficence
Comparable Moral Importance
Dalit Problem
Distant Needy
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Famine Relief
Global Justice
Global Justice Debate
Global Poor
Global voices
Indian Political Theory
International Borrowing Privilege
International Monetary Fund
International Resource Privilege
Liaison Dangereuse
Liberal Egalitarian Theories
Order Argument
Parochialism
Participation deficit
Post-colonial Thinkers
Rawlsian paradigm
Rawlsian Theory
Respective Vested Interests
Sen's work
Severe Poverty
Socio-economic Justice
Theologico Political Problem
World Justice

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415535052
  • Weight: 560g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Mar 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The global justice debate has been raging for forty years. Not merely the terms and conditions, but, more deeply, the epistemic, existential and ethical grounds of the international relations of persons, states and institutions are being determined, debated and negotiated. Yet the debate remains essentially a parochial one, confined largely to Western intellectuals and institutional spaces. An Introduction to the field is therefore still urgently required, because it remains necessary to include more ‘global’ voices into this debate of worldwide reach and significance.

The book addresses this need in two closely related ways. In Part I, it introduces the main contours of the debate by reproducing three of the most fundamental and influential essays that have been composed on the topic — essays by Peter Singer, Thomas Pogge and Thomas Nagel. In Part II, it makes a decisive critical intervention in the main stream of the debate through exposing the participation deficit afflicting the theorization of global justice. This part begins with a well-known essay by Amartya Sen, who famously referred to the ‘parochialism’ of the global justice debate in making a break with the Rawlsian paradigm that has dominated the field until now. Finally, a series of lively essays newly composed for this volume reflect on the possibilities for deparochializing global justice opened up by Sen’s work in this area.

The book will be useful for students of international relations, postcolonial studies, political theory, and social and political philosophy, as well as for those engaged in studies of globalization or global studies.

Sebastiano Maffettone is Dean of the Faculty of Political Science; Professor of Political Philosophy; and Director of the Centre for Ethics and Global Politics, at Luiss University, Rome. Aakash Singh Rathore is Research Fellow, Centre for Ethics and Global Politics, Luiss University, Rome; and Visiting Fellow, Developing Countries Research Centre, University of Delhi.