1st Edition
Nationalism and Global Justice David Miller and His Critics
Chapter 1: On Nationalism and Global Justice: An Introduction
Helder De Schutter & Ronald Tinnevelt (University of Leuven)
Chapter 2: National Responsibility and Global Justice
David Miller (University of Oxford)
Chapter 3: Liberal Nationalism, Moral Minimalism, and Global Justice
Veit Bader (University of Amsterdam)
Chapter 4: Human Rights and Global Egalitarianism
Simon Caney (University of Birmingham)
Chapter 5: Social Justice in a Global Setting
Toon Vandevelde (University of Leuven)
Chapter 6: Justice and Culture
Wilfried Hinsch (RWTH Aachen)
Chapter 7: Foundational Questions in David Miller's Global Theory
Leif Wenar (University of Sheffield)
Chapter 8: David Miller on Collective Responsibility
Ronald Pierik (University of Tilburg)
Chapter 9: Reparations and Global Distributive Justice
Kok-Chor Tan (University of Pennsylvania)
Chapter 10: Must Millennium Domes Stand in the Way of Millennium Goals?
Robert van der Veen (University of Amsterdam)
Chapter 11: Cosmopolitanism, Nation-Building and Bounded Citizenship
Ronald Tinnevelt & Helder De Schutter (University of Leuven)
Chapter 12: Does Justice Apply to the Global Order?
Margaret Moore (Queen’s University)
Chapter 13: A Reply
David Miller (University of Oxford)
List of Contributors
Bibliography
Index
Biography
Helder De Schutter is an Assistant Professor in Social and Political Philosophy at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven. His research focuses on the historical and contemporary justifications of nationalism, language policy and federalism. Recent papers have appeared in The Journal of Political Philosophy, Inquiry, Journal of Applied Philosophy, Metaphilosophy and Language Problems and Language Planning. With Ronald Tinnevelt, he is editing 'Global Democracy and Exclusion' (Wiley-Blackwell, 2010).
Ronald Tinnevelt is Associate Professor of Legal Philosophy at the Faculty of Law of the Radboud University Nijmegen. He is co-editor of Between Cosmopolitan Ideals and State Sovereignty (2006), Does Truth Matter? (2008), and Global Democracy and Exclusion (2010). He was recently awarded a Vidi scholarship from the Netherlands Organisation for Scientific Research (NWO) for a 5-year project on the relationship between moral and institutional cosmopolitanism.






