In the tradition of the English School of International Relations theory, this project from Robert Jackson seeks to show how continuities in international politics outweigh the changes. The author demonstrates how the world is neither one of anarchy, as put forward by realists, nor is it a fully cosmopolitan order, as argued by those on the other side of the theoretical spectrum. Instead, it is a world of states who acknowledge a set of moral constraints that exists between them.
Table des matières
Discourses of International Thought PART I: REALISM AND BEYOND Conversing with Thrasymachus: Voices of Realism Martin Wight, International Theory, and the Good Life Martin Wight’s Theology of Diplomacy Beyond Hobbes But Not So Far as Kant: Ethics of Security PART II: PLURALISM, SOLIDARISM, JUSTICE Faces of Sovereignty What We Owe to Foreigners: International Obligation Jurisprudence for a Solidarist World: Richard Falk’s ‘Grotian Movement’ Dialectical Justice in World Affairs Lifting the Veil of Ignorance: John Rawls’ ‘Law of Peoples’
A propos de l’auteur
ROBERT JACKSON is Professor of Political Science at Boston University, USA. He is the Author/Editor of nine books including
The Global Covenant: Human Conduct in a World of States (Oxford, 2003),
Quasi-States: Sovereignty, International Relations and the Third World (Cambridge, 1991), and Co-author of
Introduction to International Relations (Oxford, 2003).