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Full Description
Are global standards of aid, assistance and redistribution achievable in practice?
These 8 essays mirror and expand the complexity of contemporary discussions on cosmopolitanism and global justice, focusing on a normative study of the global institutional order with suggestions of direct ways to reform it. They assess schemes of worldwide distributive justice and the mechanisms required to discharge the global duties that the theories establish.
Assesses the workability of philosophical conceptions of justice for the global sphereAddresses fields including humanitarian and development aid, the slave trade, health care assistance, reparations for historical injustices, the United Nations' Central Emergency Response Fund and the global responsibility of the European UnionFor political philosophers, political scientists and sociologists working on the philosophy of international relations, global ethics, global justice, humanitarian aid and development politics
Contents
List of Contributors
Acknowledgements
1. Justice in a Complex World: An IntroductionPaulo Barcelos
Part I Human Rights and the World Economy: Questions of Scope
2. The (Difficult) Universality of Economic and Social RightsSylvie Loriaux
3. Economic Justice and the Minimally Good Human Life Account of NeedsNicole Hassoun
Part II The Applicability of Global Principles - Some Contemporary Dilemmas
4. Toward Another Kind of Development PracticeJulian Culp
5. Three Approaches to Global Health Care Justice: Rejecting the Positive/Negative Rights DistinctionPeter G. N. West-Oram
6. Restitution and Distributive JusticeGeorge F. DeMartino and Jonathan D. Moyer
Part III Justice and International Institutions
7. Narrow Versus Comprehensive Justification in Humanitarian Aid: A Case Study of the CERFAlexander Brown
8. Global Justice and the Mission of the European UnionPhilippe Van Parijs
Index



