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Ethics and International Relations
About this book
The end of the Cold War and the discussions concerning the process of globalization have brought the study of international politics face to face with new issues such as human rights, humanitarian interventions, environmental concerns, global social movements and health issues like HIV/AIDS. The challenges arising from these issues require novel theoretical approaches that are not limited to the traditional ethical concerns of international politics. The contributors to this volume re-examine existing approaches and formulate new ethical perspectives for the twenty-first century. This volume challenges the status quo in international relations and provides an opening for an alternative theoretical debate for those who are interested in international political theory.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Ethics and International Relations
- Contents
- Notes on the Contributors
- 1 Introduction: Beyond Dichotomies
- 2 The Possibility of a Cosmopolitan Ethical Order Based on the Idea of Universal Human Rights
- 3 International Politics as Ethical Life1
- 4 Exploring Social Relations, Understanding Power, and Valuing Care: the Role of Critical Feminist Ethics in International Relations Theory
- 5 Everyday Ethics in International Relations
- 6 The Events of Discourse and the Ethics of Global Hospitality
- 7 Why Fight? Humanitarianism, Principles and Poststructuralism
- 8 Restyling the Subject of Responsibility in International Relations
- 9 Ethics and International Relations: Penelope or the Handmaids
- Index