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Full Description
This book explores the role that states might play in promoting a cosmopolitan condition as an agent of cosmopolitanism rather than an obstacle to it. In doing so the book seeks to develop recent arguments in favour of locating cosmopolitan moral and political responsibility at the state level as either an alternative to, or a corollary of, cosmopolitanism as it is more commonly understood qua requiring transnational or global bearers of responsibility. As a result, the contributions in this volume see an on-going role for the state, but also its transformation, perhaps only partially, into a more cosmopolitan-minded institution -- instead of a purely 'national' or particularistic one. It therefore makes the case that the state as a form of political community can be reconciled with various form of cosmopolitan responsibility. In this way the book will address the question of how states, in the present, and in the future, can be better bearers of cosmopolitan responsibilities?
Contents
Richard Beardsworth, Garrett W. Brown, and Richard Shapcott: Introduction
Part I: The Responsibility to Protect as a Cosmopolitan Doctrine
1: Alex Bellamy and Blagovesta Tacheva: R2P and the Emergence of Responsibilities Across Borders
2: Derek Edyvane and James Souter: Good International Citizenship and Cosmopolitan Responsibilities to Protect: Balancing Responsibilities and Dirty Hands
3: Toni Erskine: Coalitions of the Willing and the Shared responsibility to Protect
4: Michael M. Doyle: Global Refugee Crisis
Part II: Cosmopolitan Responsibility and the Legal Practice of Extraterritorial Jurisdiction
5: Richard Shapcott: Cosmopolitan Extra-Territoriality
6: Melissa Curley: Exporting Harmful People: Analyzing Australia's Extra-Territorial Child Sex Tourism Laws
7: Daniella Ireland Piper: Extraterritorial Criminal Jurisdiction and the Cosmopolitan: A Double-Edged Sword
8: Andrew Linklater: Political Community and Cosmopolitan Responsibility: Sociological Considerations
Part III: Global Issues and Responsibility Beyond the State
9: Helga Haflidadottir and Anthony F. Lang: Climate Change and Cosmopolitan Responsibilities
10: Garrett Wallace Brown and Samuel Jarvis: Motivating Cosmopolitanism and the Responsibility for the Health of Others
11: Luis Cabrera: Free Movement, Sovereignty, and Cosmopolitan State Responsibility
12: David Held: Cosmopolitanism in the Face of Gridlock in Global Governance
Part IV: Cosmopolitan Republicanism
13: Taylor Elliott: Legitimacy and the State in Cosmopolitan and Republican Politics
14: Barbara Buckinx: Foreign Policy and Domination: Licensing the State
15: Steven Slaughter: Republican Citizens and Political Responsibility in a Globalizing World
16: Miriam Ronzoni: The Cosmopolitan Responsibilities of Republican States: Inevitable, but Inevitably Constrained