A long neglected concept in the field of international relations and political theory, hospitality provides a new framework for analysing many of the challenges in world politics today, from the search for peaceable relations between states to asylum and refugee crises.
Inhoudsopgave
Acknowledgements List of Contributors Introduction PART I: ON THE ORIGINS OF MODERN HOSPITALITY 1. Leviathan’s Children: On the Origins of Modern Hospitality; Haig Patapan 2. Right of Entry or Right of Refusal? Hospitality in the Law of Nature and Nations; Gideon Baker 3. From Hospitality to the Right of Immigration in the Law of Nations: 1750-1850; Georg Cavallar PART II: THE ETHICS OF GLOBAL HOSPITALITY 4. Between Naturalism and Cosmopolitan Law: Hospitality as Transitional Global Justice; Garrett Wallace Brown 5. The Wolf at the Door: Hospitality and the Outlaw in International Relations; Renee Jeffery 6. Be Welcome: Religion, Hospitality and Statelessness in International Politics; Erin K. Wilson PART III: UNDERSTANDING HOSPITALITY IN WORLD POLITICS: SOCIAL-THEORETICAL APPROACHES 7. Relative Strangers: Reflections on Hospitality, Social Distance, and Diplomacy; Nicholas Onuf 8. Reservations on Hospitality: Contact and Vulnerability in Kant and Indigenous Action; Jimmy Casas Klausen 9. Conducting Strangers: Hospitality and Governmentality in the Global City; Dan Bulley
Over de auteur
Garrett Wallace Brown, Department of Politics, University of Sheffield, UK Dan Bulley, Queen’s University, Belfast, Ireland Georg Cavallar, Department of Philosophy, University of Vienna, Austria Renee Jeffery, School of Politics and International Relations at the Australian National University’s College of Arts and Social Sciences, Australia Jimmy Casas Klausen, Department of Political Science, University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA Nicholas Onuf, Florida International University, USA Haig Patapan, Griffith University, Queensland, Australia Erin K. Wilson, University of Groningen, The Netherlands