توضیحاتی در مورد کتاب Global Justice
نام کتاب : Global Justice
عنوان ترجمه شده به فارسی : عدالت
سری :
نویسندگان : James Christensen
ناشر : Red Globe Press
سال نشر : 2020
تعداد صفحات : 232
ISBN (شابک) : 9781137606785 , 1137606789
زبان کتاب : English
فرمت کتاب : pdf
حجم کتاب : 9 مگابایت
بعد از تکمیل فرایند پرداخت لینک دانلود کتاب ارائه خواهد شد. درصورت ثبت نام و ورود به حساب کاربری خود قادر خواهید بود لیست کتاب های خریداری شده را مشاهده فرمایید.
فهرست مطالب :
Acknowledgements\nContents\n1: INTRODUCTION\n 1.1 A troubled world\n 1.2 Human rights and global justice\n 1.3 The nature of justice\n 1.4 Arguing about justice\n 1.5 Replying to the “realists”\n 1.6 Everyday “realism”\n2: RIGHTS\n 2.1 Understanding rights\n 2.2 Understanding human rights\n 2.3 Justifying human rights\n 2.4 Cultural relativism\n 2.5 A Western imposition?\n 2.6 Toleration and respect\n 2.7 Rawls on toleration\n 2.8 Diversity\n3: POVERTY\n 3.1 Peter Singer and the drowning child\n 3.2 Alternatives to Singer’s view\n 3.3 Symptoms and institutions\n 3.4 Is poverty caused by local or global factors?\n 3.5 Is the global order really harming the poor?\n 3.6 Conclusion\n4: INEQUALITY\n 4.1 Cosmopolitanism\n 4.2 The case for global equality\n 4.3 The case against global equality: The Coercion argument I\n 4.4 The case against global equality: The Coercion argument II\n 4.5 The case against global equality: Cooperation\n 4.6 Conclusion\n5: NATIONALISM\n 5.1 Nations and nationality\n 5.2 National self-determination\n 5.3 National self-determination and international redistribution\n 5.4 National self-determination and global egalitarianism\n 5.5 Global egalitarianism and special duties to compatriots\n 5.6 Global egalitarianism and national responsibility\n 5.7 The limits of human motivation\n 5.8 The value of natural resources\n 5.9 Conclusion\n6: IMMIGRATION\n 6.1 Immigration and radical global inequality\n 6.2 Immigration and the domestic poor\n 6.3 Freedom of movement\n 6.4 Immigration and cultural preservation\n 6.5 Moving beyond the status quo\n7: TRADE\n 7.1 The world poverty argument for free trade\n 7.2 The sweatshop argument for trade restrictions\n 7.3 The domestic labour argument for trade restrictions\n 7.4 A nationalist perspective\n 7.5 Special and differential treatment for developing countries\n 7.6 Fair trade as reciprocity\n 7.7 Fair trade as equality\n 7.8 Conclusion\n8: CLIMATE\n 8.1 The nature of the problem\n 8.2 The moral dimensions of our task: Avoiding the violation of human rights\n 8.3 The moral dimensions of our task: Sharing the burden\n 8.3.1 The polluter pays principle\n 8.3.2 The ability to pay principle\n 8.4 Why not make future generations pay?\n 8.5 The problem of uncertainty\n9: WAR\n 9.1 Jus ad bellum: Regulating the resort to war\n 9.2 Jus in bello: Regulating conduct within war\n 9.3 The relationship between jus ad bellum and jus in bello\n 9.4 The blameworthiness of unjust combatants\n 9.5 Conclusion\n10: INTERVENTION\n 10.1 State sovereignty and communal self-determination\n 10.2 Humanitarian intervention and the principles of just war\n 10.2.1 Just cause and crimes against humanity\n 10.2.2 Proportionality and the international order\n 10.2.3 Right intention and the selectivity of intervention\n 10.2.4 Reasonable chance of success and the argument of John Stuart Mill\n 10.3 Massacres and poverty\nBibliography\nIndex