000 02757cam a22002653i 4500
001 a673478
008 181012s2019 xxk 00 0 eng d
009 673478
020 _a978-1-108-42779-1
035 _a1089403170
040 _aDLC
_bfre
_cDLC
_dFRAS
_eAFNOR
072 _aSHS
082 0 4 _a327.1
_223E
084 _a327.1
245 0 0 _aEmpire, race and global justice /
_cedited by Duncan Bell
260 _aCambridge :
_bCambridge University Press,
_c2019
300 _a(277 p.)
520 _a"Abject poverty. Yawning inequality, political, economic, and social. Human rights and their systematic abuse. Nationality, sovereignty, citizenship. The identification of historical injustices and their possible rectification. Migration flows and border politics. The legitimation, conduct, and cessation of war. Terrorism, terror, territory. Democracy beyond and between states. All of these topics and more are addressed in contemporary debates over global justice. They have motivated activism, spawning social movements, political protest, and legal campaigns. They are debated across a range of academic disciplines and discourses: sociologists, International Relations (IR) scholars, geographers, anthropologists, economists, and historians, have contributed important work on the subject. In political theory, global justice has been a core topic at least since the end of the cold war, its meaning, scope, and policy implications contested by groups of egalitarian cosmopolitans, libertarians, liberal nationalists, and statists, among others. The importance of the subject shows no sign of waning"--
_cProvided by publisher
505 8 _aMachine generated contents note: Introduction: empire, race, and global justice Duncan Bell; 1. Reparations, history, and the origins of global justice Katrina Forrester; 2. The doctor's plot: the origins of the philosophy of human rights Samuel Moyn; 3. Corporations, universalism and the domestication of race in international law Sundhya Pahuja; 4. Race and global justice Charles W. Mills; 5. Association, reciprocity and emancipation: a transnational account of the politics of global justice Ines Valdez; 6. Global justice: just another modernisation theory? Anne Phillips; 7. Globalizing global justice Margaret Kohn; 8. Challenging liberal belief: Edward said and the critical practice of history Jeanne Morefield; 9. Cosmopolitan just war and coloniality Kimberley Hutchings; 10. Indigenous peoples, settler colonialism, and global justice in Anglo-America Robert Nichols; 11. Decolonizing borders, self-determination, and global justice Catherine Lu
700 1 _aBell, Duncan
_d(1976-....)
_eEd.
_4340
_9158671
930 _a673478
931 _aa673478
990 _aamiri
095 _axxk
999 _c648872
_d648872