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This book explores the boundaries of democratic communities, examining who is included in these boundaries and governed by them. Focus is placed on the consequences of globalization for democracy, especially in light of the exclusion that global policies impose on many citizens.
The essays in this book explore the consequences of globalizationfor democracy, covering issues which include whether democracyimplies exclusion or borders, and whether it is possible to createa democracy on a global level. Explores the consequences of globalization for democracy Discusses whether democracy implies…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This book explores the boundaries of democratic communities, examining who is included in these boundaries and governed by them. Focus is placed on the consequences of globalization for democracy, especially in light of the exclusion that global policies impose on many citizens.
The essays in this book explore the consequences of globalizationfor democracy, covering issues which include whether democracyimplies exclusion or borders, and whether it is possible to createa democracy on a global level.
Explores the consequences of globalization for democracy
Discusses whether democracy implies exclusion orboundaries
Makes sense of democracy and human rights in a globalizingworld
Investigates what kind of common identity can and shouldsupport forms of global democracy
Presents a state-of-the-art analysis of the foundations ofglobal democracy
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Autorenporträt
Ronald Tinnevelt is Associate Professor of Legal Philosophy at the Faculty of Law of the Radboud University Nijmegen. He is co-editor of Between Cosmopolitan Ideals and State Sovereignty (2006), Does Truth Matter? (2008), and Nationalism and Global Justice (2009). He was recently awarded a Vidi scholarship from the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) for a 5 year project on the relationship between moral and institutional cosmopolitanism. Helder De Schutter is an Assistant Professor in Social and Political Philosophy at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven in Belgium. He is co-editor of Nationalism and Global Justice: David Miller and His Critics (with R. Tinnevelt, 2009). He has also recently published articles in Inquiry, The Journal of Applied Philosophy, The Journal of Political Philosophy, Metaphilosophy, Language Problems and Language Planning, and Philosophy and Social Criticism.