Global Justice
Metaphilosophy

1. Auflage November 2001
280 Seiten, Softcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
ISBN:
978-0-631-22712-0
John Wiley & Sons
Contributors from several countries discuss the central moral issues arising in the emerging global order: the responsibilities of the strongest societies, moral priorities for the next decades, and the role of intellectuals in view of the huge gap between widely expressed moral ambitions and prevailing political and economic realities.
1.Thomas W. Pogge: Introduction: Global Justice.
2. Thomas W. Pogge: Priorities of Global Justice.
3. Rüdiger Bittner: Morality and World Hunger.
4. Andrew Hurrell: Global Inequality and International
Institutions.
5. Wilfried Hinsch: Global Distributive Justice.
6. Lief Wenar: Contractualism and Global Economic Justice.
7. Stéphane Chauvier: Justice and Nakedness.
8. Charles R. Beitz: Does Global Inequality Matter?.
9. Simon Caney: Cosmopolitan Justice and Equalizing
Opportunities.
10. Stefan Gosepath: The Global Scope of Justice.
11. Rainer Forst: Towards a Critical Theory of Transnational
Justice.
12. Onora O'Neill: Agents of Justice.
13. Véronique Zanetti: Global Justice: Is Interventionism
Desirable?.
14. Michael W. Doyle: The New Interventionism.
15. Andreas Føllesdal: Federal Inequality Among Equals: A
Contractualist Defense.
Notes on Contributors.
Index.
2. Thomas W. Pogge: Priorities of Global Justice.
3. Rüdiger Bittner: Morality and World Hunger.
4. Andrew Hurrell: Global Inequality and International
Institutions.
5. Wilfried Hinsch: Global Distributive Justice.
6. Lief Wenar: Contractualism and Global Economic Justice.
7. Stéphane Chauvier: Justice and Nakedness.
8. Charles R. Beitz: Does Global Inequality Matter?.
9. Simon Caney: Cosmopolitan Justice and Equalizing
Opportunities.
10. Stefan Gosepath: The Global Scope of Justice.
11. Rainer Forst: Towards a Critical Theory of Transnational
Justice.
12. Onora O'Neill: Agents of Justice.
13. Véronique Zanetti: Global Justice: Is Interventionism
Desirable?.
14. Michael W. Doyle: The New Interventionism.
15. Andreas Føllesdal: Federal Inequality Among Equals: A
Contractualist Defense.
Notes on Contributors.
Index.
Thomas W. Pogge is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University and at Oslo University. The author of Realizing Rawls, he also works on Kant and issues of international justice.