Empire, race and global justice

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Empire, race and global justice

edited by Duncan Bell

Cambridge University Press, 2019

  • : hardback

Available at  / 13 libraries

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Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The status of boundaries and borders, questions of global poverty and inequality, criteria for the legitimate uses of force, the value of international law, human rights, nationality, sovereignty, migration, territory, and citizenship: debates over these critical issues are central to contemporary understandings of world politics. Bringing together an interdisciplinary range of contributors, including historians, political theorists, lawyers, and international relations scholars, this is the first volume of its kind to explore the racial and imperial dimensions of normative debates over global justice.

Table of Contents

  • 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.

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