On Rawls, development and global justice : the freedom of peoples

著者

    • Williams, Huw Lloyd

書誌事項

On Rawls, development and global justice : the freedom of peoples

Huw Lloyd Williams

(International political theory series / series editor, Gary Browning)

Palgrave Macmillan, 2011

  • : hardback

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注記

Includes bibliography: p. 226-232

Includes index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

John Rawls' text The Law of Peoples has inspired extensive scholarly debate in the field of international political theory, since its publication in 1999. Responding to the arguments of cosmopolitan theorists and Amartya Sen's recent critique, this new work presents a fresh appraisal of the debate, and argues that Rawls offers a persuasive and prescient moral perspective on issues of global poverty and development. By elaborating one of Rawls' core ideas, 'the duty of assistance', the book offers a unique theoretical response to the ideal of global justice. The duty is presented as a far-reaching principle of justice, one that advocates increasing the state capability of burdened societies, and aims to compel the most powerful states to reform international structures and provide aid, in a constructive and culturally sensitive manner. The aim of assistance is the strengthening of democratic, or 'decent' indigenous institutions and the promotion of the freedom of peoples. On Rawls, Development and Global Justice is an original contribution to current debates on international redistribution, democracy promotion and global poverty.

目次

Introduction PART I The Cosmopolitan Critique Elucidating the 'Libertarian' Law of Peoples A Duty with No Obligations? PART II Considering the Capability Perspective Conceptualizing State Capability: The Freedom of Peoples Actualising State Capability PART III A Duty in Equilibrium Creeping Cosmopolitanism? Conclusions

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