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Full Description
Both classical and modern accounts of justice largely overlook the question of how the communities within which justice applies are constituted in the first place. This book addresses that problem, arguing that we need to accord a place to the theory of 'constitutive justice' alongside traditional categories of distributive and commutative justice.
Contents
Preface Introduction: What If We Held a Constitutional Convention and Everybody Came? Chapter 1: The Scope and Scale of Justice Chapter 2: Reservations about Constitutive Justice Chapter 3: Constitutive Justice-A Paradox? Chapter 4: Justice Between Communitarianism and Cosmopolitanism Chapter 5: Four Transcommunal Approaches Chapter 6: Constituents of a Theory Chapter 7: Toward a Theory of Constitutive Justice Bibliography Index



