Fr. 136.00

Liberal Rights and Responsibilities - Essays on Citizenship and Sovereignty

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Spedizione di solito entro 3 a 5 settimane

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Zusatztext These essays will engage anyone interested in issues of political obligation to the state and justice beyond borders. It is a collection I warmly recommend. Informationen zum Autor Christopher Heath Wellman is Professor of Philosophy at Washington University in St. Louis. He works in ethics, specializing in political and legal philosophy. His previous books include A Theory of Secession (2005); (with John Simmons) Is There a Duty to Obey the Law? (2005); (with Andrew Altman) A Liberal Theory of International Justice (OUP, 2009); and (with Phillip Cole) Debating the Ethics of Immigration: Is There a Right to Exclude? (OUP, 2011). Klappentext The twin questions at the heart of political philosophy are "Why may the state forcibly impose itself on its constituents? " and "Why must citizens obey the state's commands? " In Liberal Rights and Responsibilities, Christopher Heath Wellman offers original responses to these fundamental questions and then, building upon these answers, defends a number of distinctive positions concerning the rights and responsibilities individual citizens, separatist groups, and political states have regarding one another. The first four chapters combine to critically discuss standard theories of political obligation and then to introduce Wellman's samaritan explanation of our duty to obey the law. The next three papers challenge the traditional approaches to group autonomy en route to advancing Wellman's functional account of political self-determination. Next Wellman reviews group responsibility and argues that, in addition to discharging our individual moral duties, each of us must do our share to ensure that the groups to which we belong do not perpetrate injustice. In the ninth chapter, Wellman invokes freedom of association to provide a defense of a legitimate state's right to unilaterally design and enforce an exclusionary immigration policy. The last two essays are on punishment; the first defends the rights forfeiture justification of punishment, and the second combines this rights forfeiture theory with the samaritan account of political legitimacy to explain why legitimate states may permissibly assume exclusive control over the enforcement of criminal law. Taken as a group, these eleven essays - one new and ten previously published - aim to vindicate a liberal political philosopher's capacity to begin with relatively modest moral principles and still arrive at robust conclusions in favor of the moral standing of legitimate states. Zusammenfassung In this book, Christopher Heath Wellman offers original theories of political legitimacy and our obligation to obey the law, and then, building upon these accounts, defends a number of distinctive positions concerning the rights and responsibilities individual citizens, separatist groups, and political states have regarding one another. Inhaltsverzeichnis Acknowledgements Introduction Chapter One: Associative Allegiances and Political Obligations Chapter Two: Relational Facts in Liberal Theory: Is There Magic in the Pronoun "My"? Chapter Three: Toward a Liberal Theory of Political Obligation Chapter Four: Political Obligation and the Particularity Requirement Chapter Five: A Defense of Secession and Political Self-Determination Chapter Six: The Truth in the Nationalist Principle Chapter Seven: Group Autonomy and State Sovereignty Chapter Eight: Responsibility: Personal, Corporate, Collective Chapter Nine: Immigration and Freedom of Association Chapter Ten: The Rights Forfeiture Theory of Punishment Chapter Eleven: Rights and State Punishment Index ...

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