John Wiley & Sons Rawls's Law of Peoples Cover John Rawlsis considered the most important theorist of justice in much of western Europe and the Eng.. Product #: 978-1-4051-3530-6 Regular price: $111.21 $111.21 Auf Lager

Rawls's Law of Peoples

A Realistic Utopia?

Martin, Rex / Reidy, David A. (Herausgeber)

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1. Auflage April 2006
344 Seiten, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-1-4051-3530-6
John Wiley & Sons

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John Rawlsis considered the most important theorist of justice in much of western Europe and the English-speaking world more generally. This volume examines Rawls's theory of international justice as worked out in his last and perhaps most controversial book, The Law of Peoples. It contains new and stimulating essays, some sympathetic, others critical, written by pre-eminent theorists in the field. These essays situate Rawls's The Law of Peoples historically and methodologically, and examine all its key ingredients: its thin cosmopolitanism, its doctrine of human rights, its principles of global economic justice, and its normative theory of liberal foreign policy. The book will set the terms of the debate on The Law of Peoples for years to come, thereby shaping the broader debates about global justice.

Notes on Contributors.

Preface.

List of Abbreviations.

Part I: Background and Structure:.

1. Introduction: Rex Martin (University of Kansas) and David
Reidy (University of Tennessee).

2. Uniting What Interest Prescribes with What Right Permits:
Rawls's Law of Peoples in Context: David Boucher
(Cardiff).

3. Rawls's Peoples: Philip Pettit (Princeton).

Part II: Cosmopolitanism, Nationalism and Universalism:
Questions of Priority and Coherence:.

4. Cultural Imperialism and "Democratic Peace.":
Catherine Audard (LSE, UK).

5. The Problem of Decent Peoples: Kok-Chor Tan (Univ. of
Pennsylvania).

6. Why Rawls is Not a Cosmopolitan Egalitarian: Leif Wenar
(Sheffield, UK).

Part III: On Human Rights.

7. Human Rights as Moral Claim-Rights: Wilfried Hinsch and
Markus Stepanians (Univ. of Saarland, Germany).

8. Rawls's Narrow Doctrine of Human Rights: Alistair
Macleod (Queen's Univ., Canada).

9. Taking the Human Out of Human Rights: Allen Buchanan (Duke
Univ., USA).

10. Political Authority and Human Rights: David Reidy(University
of Tennessee).

Part IV: On Global Economic Justice.

11. Collective Responsibility and International Inequality in
The Law of Peoples: David Miller (Oxford).

12. Do Rawls's Two Theories of Justice Fit Together?:
Thomas Pogge (Columbia, USA).

13. Rawls on International Distributive Economic Justice: Taking
a Closer Look: Rex Martin (University of Kansas, Lawrence).

14. Distributive Justice and The Law of Peoples: Samuel
Freeman (Univ. of Pennsylvania).

Part V: On Liberal Democratic Foreign Policy.

15. Rawls's Theory of Human Rights in Light of
Contemporary Human Rights Law and Practice: Jim Nickel (Arizona
State University College of Law).

16. A Human Right to Democracy? Rawls's Law of Peoples on
Governmental Legitimacy and Humanitarian Intervention: Alyssa
Bernstein (Ohio Univ).

17. Justice, Stability and Toleration in a Federation of
Well-Ordered Peoples: Andreas Follesdal (Univ. of Oslo,
Norway).

Index.

.

.
"This is a useful and illuminating volume that will greatly deepen
its readers' understanding of Rawls's The Law of Peoples and
related problems of justice and human rights on a global scale."
(Human Right Review, December 2008)

A Choice Magazine's Outstanding Academic Book for 2006

"Like his conception of social justice, John Rawls's vision
of a just world has been the subject of heated debate, but its real
strengths and weaknesses are becoming apparent only gradually. This
excellent volume substantially advances that process, and will
benefit anyone hoping to understand how one of the greatest
political philosophers addressed some of humanity's most
pressing problems."

-Andrew Williams, University of Reading
Rex Martin is Professor of Philosophy at the University of
Kansas and Honorary Professor at Cardiff University. His most
recent books are A System of Rights (1997) and a revised
edition of R.G. Collingwood's An Essay on Metaphysics
(2002).

David Reidy is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at the
University of Tennessee. He is the author of many articles and
chapters in political philosophy and the philosophy of law and on
Rawls in particular. He is the co-editor, with Mortimer Sellers, of
Universal Human Rights: Moral Order in a Divided World
(2005).

R. Martin, University of Kansas; D. A. Reidy, University of Tennessee at Knoxville