Read more
Informationen zum Autor Fernando R. Tesón is the Tobias Simon Eminent Scholar and a Professor of Law at the Florida State University College of Law. A renowned scholar of political philosophy and international law, he is the author of Justice at a Distance: Extending Global Freedom (with Loren Lomasky, Cambridge, 2015) and Humanitarian Intervention: An Inquiry into Law and Morality, 3rd edition (2005), among many others. A native of Argentina, he is a founding member of the blog Bleeding Heart Libertarians (bleedingheartlibertarians.com). Klappentext In this book, leading scholars re-examine the principle of national self-determination from diverse theoretical perspectives. Zusammenfassung This book is a valuable addition to the literature on self-determination. Top scholars in the field debate the concepts of nation! people! secession! and democracy! as they appear in international law and in actual diplomacy. It will be an essential tool for international law scholars! global-justice philosophers! and international-relations specialists. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction: the conundrum of self-determination Fernando R. Tesón; 1. Self-determination and moral variation Bas van der Vossen; 2. The case for national self-determination Christopher W. Morris; 3. The right to self-determination: earned, not inherent Frédéric Mégret; 4. The right to exist and the right to resist Jens David Ohlin; 5. Self-determination in three movements Patrick Macklem; 6. Self-determination for national minorities Alan Patten; 7. Self-determination, dissent, and the problem of population transfers Matthew Lister; 8. Civil disobedience, dirty hands, and secession Michael Blake; 9. 'Mars for the martians?' On the obsolescence of self-determination John R. Morss; 10. The evolution of self-determination of peoples in international law Elizabeth Rodríguez-Santiago.