International Society
Terry Nardin (Hrsg.), David R. Mapel (Hrsg.)
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Sozialwissenschaften, Recht, Wirtschaft / Politikwissenschaft
Beschreibung
In a time of eroding sovereignty and resurgent nationalism, this collection provides a searching investigation of the moral foundations of the international order. Drawing on diverse philosophical and theological perspectives, the contributors debate the character of international society, the authority of international law and institutions, and the demands of international justice. In a series of philosophical essays, each followed by a critical commentary, the book considers the contributions of legal positivism, natural law, Kantian ethics, contractarian theory, and moral cosmopolitanism to the discussion of law and justice in international society. It also includes commentaries by experts in Jewish, Christian, and Islamic moral theology, and a concluding chapter that compares and contrasts the views presented without seeking to adjudicate their differences.
Because of its comprehensive approach and the diversity of its viewpoints, the volume serves as an introduction to the topic and as a resource for scholars, journalists, policy makers, and anyone else who wants to understand better the range of moral perspectives that underlies discussion of the current international order. In addition to the editors, the contributors are Brian Barry, Chris Brown, John Charvet, Richard Friedman, Robert P. George, Sohail Hashmi, Pierre Laberge, David Miller, David Novak, Max L. Stackhouse, Fernando R. Tesón, and Frederick G. Whelan.
Kundenbewertungen
Divine law, Contractualism, Jurisprudence, Governance, Law of obligations, Public international law, Requirement, Political science, John Rawls, Liberal democracy, Non-interventionism, Positive law, Institution, International law, Religion, A Theory of Justice, Theology, Custom (law), Deliberation, State of nature, Legal positivism, Ideology, Politics, Communitarianism, Cambridge University Press, Common law, Positivism, Civil society, Natural and legal rights, Onora O'Neill, Christianity, World government, Social contract, Doctrine, Self-interest, Cosmopolitanism, Lawyer, Jews, Interdependence, Utilitarianism, Treaty, Westphalian sovereignty, Theory, Law of war, Modus vivendi, Principle, Jurisdiction, Morality, Muslim, Legislation, International ethics, Tax, Customary international law, Obligation, Rule of law, Natural law, Liberalism, Natural justice, Michael Walzer, Sovereignty, Consideration, Perpetual peace, Kantianism, Legitimacy (political), Oxford University Press, Philosophy, The Concept of Law, Distributive justice, Political philosophy, International relations