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基本説明
Contains critical responses to Tully's work from a selection of contemporaries.
Full Description
This book is open access and available on www.bloomsburycollections.com. It is funded by Knowledge Unlatched.
Global Citizenship develops James Tully's distinctive and influential approach to political philosophy, first outlined in his 2008 two-volume work Public Philosophy in a New Key, and applies it to the field of citizenship. The book opens with a substantial original essay from Tully, which is philosophically astute, historically informed and always engaged with the politics of the real world.
The second part of a book contains responses from influential interlocutors -- Aletta Norval, Antony Laden, Bonnie Honig and Marc Stears, Annabel Brett, Duncan Bell and David Owen. These provide a commentary not just on the ideas contained in this volume, but on Tully's approach to political philosophy more generally, thus making the book an ideal first source for academics and students wishing to engage with Tully's work. The volume closes with a response from Tully to his interlocutors.
Contents
Table of Contents
Introduction
Part One: Lead Essay
On Modern and Diverse Citizenship, James Tully, University of Victoria, BC, Canada
Part Two: Responses
Civic Reasoning: a Democratic Perspective, Anthony Laden, University of Illinois, Chicago, USA
Practices of Citizenization and Democratic Claim-making, Aletta Norval, University of Essex, UK
To Act Otherwise: Agonistic Republicanism and Global Citizenship, Duncan Bell, University of Cambridge, UK
Modern and Diverse Citizenship: Historical and Philosophical Perspectives, Andy Mason, University of Southampton, UK
Institutions, Citizenship and Non-Sovereignty, Adam Dunn, University of Southampton, UK and David Owen, University of Southampton, UK
Citizenship and Civil Disobedience, Robin Celikates, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands
The New Realism: From Modus Vivendi to Justice, Bonnie Honig, Northwestern University, USA and Marc Stears, University of Oxford, UK
Part Three: Reply
For Cooperative Citizenship, James Tully, University of Victoria, Canada
Bibliography
Index