Global justice
Etablissement : ESPOL European School of Political and Social Sciences
Langue : Anglais
Formation(s) dans laquelle/lesquelles le cours apparait :
- Master’s in Digital Politics and Governance [ECTS : 4,00]
- Master’s in International and Security politics [ECTS : 4,00]
- Master’s in Multilevel Governance in Europe [ECTS : 4,00]
Période : S2
This course examines the complex relations between ethics, politics and economics in international affairs. More precisely, it deals with the rise of conception of global justice and the study of global inequalities. Themes covered will include; justifications and critiques of global inequalities; the centrality of human rights; global poverty and inequality; environmental justice; neoliberalism. Attention will be paid to the complex interconnections of empirical and normative issues raised by the shaping and reshaping of our discourses on global inequalities.
Special attention will be paid to S. Moyn magistral historical account of human rights in his 2019 influential Not Enough: Human Rights in an Unequal World (Cambridge MA: Harvard University Press).
- Introduction: justice and our global order
- A short history of (global) distributive justice: Rawls vs. the Rawlsians
- Neoliberal (in)justice?
- The centrality of human rights (1)
- The centrality of human rights (2)
- Climate justice
- Defending the 1%? Justifications of (global) inequalities
- Responsibility for global (in)justice: the rise of “corporate social responsibility”
- Having too much? Making sense of limitarianism