Book contents
- Conversations on Justice from National, International, and Global Perspectives
- Conversations on Justice from National, International, and Global Perspectives
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Global Knowledge/Global Thought
- Part II From Thinking Globally to Global Ethics
- 5 Extent and Limits of Global Justice
- 6 Minority Rights, Secularism, and Justice
- 7 Decent Society, Memory, and Compromise
- 8 Global Ethics and Global Justice
- Part III International Law and Global Justice
- Part IV World Order and Global Policy
- Part V Concluding Thoughts
- Intellectual Profiles of the Contributors
- Index
8 - Global Ethics and Global Justice
from Part II - From Thinking Globally to Global Ethics
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 14 December 2018
- Conversations on Justice from National, International, and Global Perspectives
- Conversations on Justice from National, International, and Global Perspectives
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- 1 Introduction
- Part I Global Knowledge/Global Thought
- Part II From Thinking Globally to Global Ethics
- 5 Extent and Limits of Global Justice
- 6 Minority Rights, Secularism, and Justice
- 7 Decent Society, Memory, and Compromise
- 8 Global Ethics and Global Justice
- Part III International Law and Global Justice
- Part IV World Order and Global Policy
- Part V Concluding Thoughts
- Intellectual Profiles of the Contributors
- Index
Summary
Thomas W. Pogge begins with the need to distinguish between the concept of justice and various conceptions of justice. In this perspective, he distinguishes international justice, which has been around and covers the interactions and the rules states do or should commit themselves to, and global justice, where it is individual human beings who have primary rights and are the subjects of global justice. On this basis, Pogge explores the conditions under which the pursuit of global justice could be better achieved.
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- Information
- Conversations on Justice from National, International, and Global PerspectivesDialogues with Leading Thinkers, pp. 167 - 194Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2019