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Global distributive justice /

"Global distributive justice is now part of mainstream political debate. It incorporates issues that are now a familiar feature of the political landscape, such as global poverty, trade justice, aid to the developing world and debt cancellation. This is the first textbook to focus exclusively o...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Armstrong, Chris, 1973-
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2012.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Global Distributive Justice; Title; Copyright; Contents; Text boxes; Introduction; The scope and approach of the book; The structure of the book; Part I; Approaches; Chapter 1; Global distributive justice: what and why?; 1.1. Some facts about global poverty; 1.2.1. Duties of justice and duties of humanitarianism; 1.2.2. Positive and negative duties of justice; 1.3. Why global distributive justice?; 1.3.1. Relational approaches; 1.3.1.1. Pogge on the global institutional order; 1.3.2. Non-relational approaches; 1.3.2.1. Caney on justice beyond borders
  • 1.4. Egalitarian and minimalist approachesConclusions; Chapter 2; Egalitarian approaches; 2.1. The nature and extent of global inequality; 2.2. Beitz on global distributive justice; 2.2.1. The (re)distribution of natural resources; 2.2.2. A global difference principle; 2.2.3. Responses to Beitz; 2.3. Caney on global distributive justice; 2.3.1. Global equality of opportunity; 2.3.2. Responses to Caney; 2.4. Cosmopolitanism and global justice; Conclusions; Chapter 3; Minimalist approaches; 3.2. Rawls and the Law of Peoples; 3.2.1. Rawls on global distributive justice; 3.2.2. Responses to Rawls
  • 3.3. Miller on national responsibilities3.3.1. Miller on global distributive justice; 3.3.2. Responses to Miller; 3.4. Nagel on coercion and the state; 3.4.1. Nagel on global distributive justice; 3.4.2. Responses to Nagel; 3.5. Global minimalism versus global egalitarianism; Part II; Issues; Chapter 4; Global justice and human rights; 4.1. Why human rights?; 4.1.1. Moral personhood and normative agency; 4.1.2. Basic needs and interests; 4.1.3. Controversies about the content of human rights; 4.2. Human rights and subsistence; 4.2.1. Basic rights and subsistence
  • 4.3. Duties to fulfil human rights4.3.1. Miller's division of labour; 4.3.2. Responses to Miller's division of labour; 4.4. Further issues: a human right to health?; Chapter 5; Global justice and natural resources; 5.1. A resource redistribution principle?; 5.2. The ownership and sale of natural resources; 5.2.1. Pogge on the 'resource privilege'; 5.2.2. Wenar on the 'resource curse'; 5.3. Alternatives to national ownership of resources; 5.3.1. Defending national ownership of resources?; 5.3.2. Common ownership of resources; 5.3.3. Equal ownership of resources
  • 5.4. Further issues: water and global justiceChapter 6; Global justice and international trade; 6.1. International trade and global justice; 6.1.1. Minimalist approaches; 6.1.2. Egalitarian approaches; 6.1.3. Opposed approaches?; 6.2. Trade rules and the WTO; 6.2.1. The WTO and fair decision-making; 6.3.2. The WTO and fairness of outcomes; 6.3. Fair Trade; 6.4. Further issues: trade justice and labour standards; Chapter 7; Global justice and climate change; 7.1. Minimalist responses to climate change; 7.1.1. Rawls and the just savings principle; 7.1.2. Miller on climate change