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Sommario
1. Introduction: challenges, agents, cases; 2. Agents of justice; 3. Democratizing formal authority: states and international organizations; 4. Democratizing money: the rich, corporations, and foundations; 5. Democratizing the power of words: experts, public intellectuals, advocacy groups, and the media; 6. Empowering the many: citizens and the poor; 7. Democratizing intergenerational, interspecies, and ecological justice: the role of moral imagination in deliberation; 8. Global justice in the deliberative system; 9. Conclusion.
Info autore
John S. Dryzek is Centenary Professor and Australian Research Council Laureate Fellow at the University of Canberra. He is the author of numerous books on democracy and on environmental politics, including the prize-winning co-authored The Politics of the Anthropocene (2019). He is co-editor of The Oxford Handbook of Deliberative Democracy (2018).Ana Tanasoca is research fellow in Philosophy at Macquarie University. She is author of Deliberation Naturalized (2020), The Ethics of Multiple Citizenship (2018) and recent articles in Perspectives on Politics and the Journal of Political Philosophy.
Riassunto
Dryzek and Tanasoca examine how justice in the international system requires movement toward global democracy, and how such moves can be made in areas like climate governance and the formulation of the Sustainable Development Goals. For scholars and students in political theory, philosophy, international ethics, and global governance.