Thom Brooks
The Oxford Handbook of Global Justice
Thom Brooks
The Oxford Handbook of Global Justice
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The Oxford Handbook of Global Justice explores an exciting area of refreshing, innovative new ideas for a changing world facing significant challenges.
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The Oxford Handbook of Global Justice explores an exciting area of refreshing, innovative new ideas for a changing world facing significant challenges.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 560
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. November 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 243mm x 172mm x 32mm
- Gewicht: 996g
- ISBN-13: 9780198890812
- ISBN-10: 0198890818
- Artikelnr.: 68139186
- Verlag: Hurst & Co.
- Seitenzahl: 560
- Erscheinungstermin: 21. November 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 243mm x 172mm x 32mm
- Gewicht: 996g
- ISBN-13: 9780198890812
- ISBN-10: 0198890818
- Artikelnr.: 68139186
Thom Brooks is Dean of Durham University's Law School and Chair in Law and Government. He is an award-winning author, columnist, policy advisor, and public speaker. He appears frequently on television, radio, and in print media discussing immigration & citizenship, British politics, punishment & sentencing, US politics, and other topics as a highly sought after commentator and expert. His general research interests are in ethics, law, and public policy.
* Introduction
* PART I. GLOBAL EGALITARIANISM AND ITS CRITICS
* 1: MIRIAM RONZONI and LAURA VALENTINI: Global Justice and the Role of
the State: A Critical Survey
* 2: GILLIAN BROCK: Equality of Opportunity and Global Justice
* 3: LUIS CABRERA: Global Justice and Global Citizenship
* 4: JÁNOS KIS: On the Core of Distributive Egalitarianism: Towards a
Two-Level Account
* PART II. HUMAN RIGHTS
* 5: SAMANTHA BESSON: The Holders of Human Rights: The Bright Side of
Human Rights?
* 6: CAROL C. GOULD: Motivating Solidarity with Distant Others:
Empathic Politics, Responsibility, and the Problem of Global Justice
* 7: JOHN TASIOULAS and EFFY VAYENA: Just Global Health: Integrating
Human Rights and Common Goods
* 8: KRUSHIL WATENE: Transforming Global Justice Theorizing: Indigenous
Philosophies
* PART III. SEVERE POVERTY
* 9: JESSE TOMALTY: The Link between Subsistence and Human Rights
* 10: THOM BROOKS: Capabilities, Freedom and Severe Poverty
* 11: NICOLE HASSOUN: Aiding the Poor in Present and Future
Generations: Some Reflections on a Simple Model
* PART IV. CLIMATE CHANGE JUSTICE
* 12: THOM BROOKS: Climate Change Ethics and the Problem of End-State
Solutions
* 13: HENRY SHUE: Distant Strangers and the Illusion of Separation:
Climate, Development and Disaster
* PART V. JUST GLOBAL INSTITUTIONS
* 14: PABLO GILABERT: The Human Right to Democracy and the Pursuit of
Global Justice
* 15: ARTHUR CHIN: Thomas Pogge's Conception of Taking the Global
Institutional Order as the Object of Justice Assessments
* 16: CHRISTIAN BARRY and DAVID WIENS: What Second-Best Scenarios
Reveal about Ideals of Global Justice
* 17: ALISON JAGGAR: Global Gender Justice
* 18: STEVEN R. RATNER: International Law
* PART VI. BORDERS AND TERRITORIAL RIGHTS
* 19: DAVID MILLER: Immigration
* 20: CHRISTOPHER HEATH WELLMAN: Political Legitimacy and Territorial
Rights
* 21: ANNA STILZ: Settlement and the Right to Exclude
* PART VII. GLOBAL INJUSTICE
* 22: RAINER FORST: A Critical Theory of Transnational (In-)justice:
Realistic in the Right Way
* 23: KOK-CHOR TAN: Personal Responsibility and Global Injustice
* 24: JIWEI CI: Thinking Normatively about Global Justice without
Serious Reflection on Global Capitalism: The Exemplary Case of Rawls
* 25: SIMON CANEY: The Right to Resist Global Injustice
* PART I. GLOBAL EGALITARIANISM AND ITS CRITICS
* 1: MIRIAM RONZONI and LAURA VALENTINI: Global Justice and the Role of
the State: A Critical Survey
* 2: GILLIAN BROCK: Equality of Opportunity and Global Justice
* 3: LUIS CABRERA: Global Justice and Global Citizenship
* 4: JÁNOS KIS: On the Core of Distributive Egalitarianism: Towards a
Two-Level Account
* PART II. HUMAN RIGHTS
* 5: SAMANTHA BESSON: The Holders of Human Rights: The Bright Side of
Human Rights?
* 6: CAROL C. GOULD: Motivating Solidarity with Distant Others:
Empathic Politics, Responsibility, and the Problem of Global Justice
* 7: JOHN TASIOULAS and EFFY VAYENA: Just Global Health: Integrating
Human Rights and Common Goods
* 8: KRUSHIL WATENE: Transforming Global Justice Theorizing: Indigenous
Philosophies
* PART III. SEVERE POVERTY
* 9: JESSE TOMALTY: The Link between Subsistence and Human Rights
* 10: THOM BROOKS: Capabilities, Freedom and Severe Poverty
* 11: NICOLE HASSOUN: Aiding the Poor in Present and Future
Generations: Some Reflections on a Simple Model
* PART IV. CLIMATE CHANGE JUSTICE
* 12: THOM BROOKS: Climate Change Ethics and the Problem of End-State
Solutions
* 13: HENRY SHUE: Distant Strangers and the Illusion of Separation:
Climate, Development and Disaster
* PART V. JUST GLOBAL INSTITUTIONS
* 14: PABLO GILABERT: The Human Right to Democracy and the Pursuit of
Global Justice
* 15: ARTHUR CHIN: Thomas Pogge's Conception of Taking the Global
Institutional Order as the Object of Justice Assessments
* 16: CHRISTIAN BARRY and DAVID WIENS: What Second-Best Scenarios
Reveal about Ideals of Global Justice
* 17: ALISON JAGGAR: Global Gender Justice
* 18: STEVEN R. RATNER: International Law
* PART VI. BORDERS AND TERRITORIAL RIGHTS
* 19: DAVID MILLER: Immigration
* 20: CHRISTOPHER HEATH WELLMAN: Political Legitimacy and Territorial
Rights
* 21: ANNA STILZ: Settlement and the Right to Exclude
* PART VII. GLOBAL INJUSTICE
* 22: RAINER FORST: A Critical Theory of Transnational (In-)justice:
Realistic in the Right Way
* 23: KOK-CHOR TAN: Personal Responsibility and Global Injustice
* 24: JIWEI CI: Thinking Normatively about Global Justice without
Serious Reflection on Global Capitalism: The Exemplary Case of Rawls
* 25: SIMON CANEY: The Right to Resist Global Injustice
* Introduction
* PART I. GLOBAL EGALITARIANISM AND ITS CRITICS
* 1: MIRIAM RONZONI and LAURA VALENTINI: Global Justice and the Role of
the State: A Critical Survey
* 2: GILLIAN BROCK: Equality of Opportunity and Global Justice
* 3: LUIS CABRERA: Global Justice and Global Citizenship
* 4: JÁNOS KIS: On the Core of Distributive Egalitarianism: Towards a
Two-Level Account
* PART II. HUMAN RIGHTS
* 5: SAMANTHA BESSON: The Holders of Human Rights: The Bright Side of
Human Rights?
* 6: CAROL C. GOULD: Motivating Solidarity with Distant Others:
Empathic Politics, Responsibility, and the Problem of Global Justice
* 7: JOHN TASIOULAS and EFFY VAYENA: Just Global Health: Integrating
Human Rights and Common Goods
* 8: KRUSHIL WATENE: Transforming Global Justice Theorizing: Indigenous
Philosophies
* PART III. SEVERE POVERTY
* 9: JESSE TOMALTY: The Link between Subsistence and Human Rights
* 10: THOM BROOKS: Capabilities, Freedom and Severe Poverty
* 11: NICOLE HASSOUN: Aiding the Poor in Present and Future
Generations: Some Reflections on a Simple Model
* PART IV. CLIMATE CHANGE JUSTICE
* 12: THOM BROOKS: Climate Change Ethics and the Problem of End-State
Solutions
* 13: HENRY SHUE: Distant Strangers and the Illusion of Separation:
Climate, Development and Disaster
* PART V. JUST GLOBAL INSTITUTIONS
* 14: PABLO GILABERT: The Human Right to Democracy and the Pursuit of
Global Justice
* 15: ARTHUR CHIN: Thomas Pogge's Conception of Taking the Global
Institutional Order as the Object of Justice Assessments
* 16: CHRISTIAN BARRY and DAVID WIENS: What Second-Best Scenarios
Reveal about Ideals of Global Justice
* 17: ALISON JAGGAR: Global Gender Justice
* 18: STEVEN R. RATNER: International Law
* PART VI. BORDERS AND TERRITORIAL RIGHTS
* 19: DAVID MILLER: Immigration
* 20: CHRISTOPHER HEATH WELLMAN: Political Legitimacy and Territorial
Rights
* 21: ANNA STILZ: Settlement and the Right to Exclude
* PART VII. GLOBAL INJUSTICE
* 22: RAINER FORST: A Critical Theory of Transnational (In-)justice:
Realistic in the Right Way
* 23: KOK-CHOR TAN: Personal Responsibility and Global Injustice
* 24: JIWEI CI: Thinking Normatively about Global Justice without
Serious Reflection on Global Capitalism: The Exemplary Case of Rawls
* 25: SIMON CANEY: The Right to Resist Global Injustice
* PART I. GLOBAL EGALITARIANISM AND ITS CRITICS
* 1: MIRIAM RONZONI and LAURA VALENTINI: Global Justice and the Role of
the State: A Critical Survey
* 2: GILLIAN BROCK: Equality of Opportunity and Global Justice
* 3: LUIS CABRERA: Global Justice and Global Citizenship
* 4: JÁNOS KIS: On the Core of Distributive Egalitarianism: Towards a
Two-Level Account
* PART II. HUMAN RIGHTS
* 5: SAMANTHA BESSON: The Holders of Human Rights: The Bright Side of
Human Rights?
* 6: CAROL C. GOULD: Motivating Solidarity with Distant Others:
Empathic Politics, Responsibility, and the Problem of Global Justice
* 7: JOHN TASIOULAS and EFFY VAYENA: Just Global Health: Integrating
Human Rights and Common Goods
* 8: KRUSHIL WATENE: Transforming Global Justice Theorizing: Indigenous
Philosophies
* PART III. SEVERE POVERTY
* 9: JESSE TOMALTY: The Link between Subsistence and Human Rights
* 10: THOM BROOKS: Capabilities, Freedom and Severe Poverty
* 11: NICOLE HASSOUN: Aiding the Poor in Present and Future
Generations: Some Reflections on a Simple Model
* PART IV. CLIMATE CHANGE JUSTICE
* 12: THOM BROOKS: Climate Change Ethics and the Problem of End-State
Solutions
* 13: HENRY SHUE: Distant Strangers and the Illusion of Separation:
Climate, Development and Disaster
* PART V. JUST GLOBAL INSTITUTIONS
* 14: PABLO GILABERT: The Human Right to Democracy and the Pursuit of
Global Justice
* 15: ARTHUR CHIN: Thomas Pogge's Conception of Taking the Global
Institutional Order as the Object of Justice Assessments
* 16: CHRISTIAN BARRY and DAVID WIENS: What Second-Best Scenarios
Reveal about Ideals of Global Justice
* 17: ALISON JAGGAR: Global Gender Justice
* 18: STEVEN R. RATNER: International Law
* PART VI. BORDERS AND TERRITORIAL RIGHTS
* 19: DAVID MILLER: Immigration
* 20: CHRISTOPHER HEATH WELLMAN: Political Legitimacy and Territorial
Rights
* 21: ANNA STILZ: Settlement and the Right to Exclude
* PART VII. GLOBAL INJUSTICE
* 22: RAINER FORST: A Critical Theory of Transnational (In-)justice:
Realistic in the Right Way
* 23: KOK-CHOR TAN: Personal Responsibility and Global Injustice
* 24: JIWEI CI: Thinking Normatively about Global Justice without
Serious Reflection on Global Capitalism: The Exemplary Case of Rawls
* 25: SIMON CANEY: The Right to Resist Global Injustice