1st Edition
Domination and Global Political Justice Conceptual, Historical and Institutional Perspectives
1. Domination Across Borders: An Introduction Barbara Buckinx, Jonathan Trejo-Mathys, and Timothy Waligore Part 1:. Domination and Non-Domination: Conceptual Issues 2. The Republican Law of Peoples: A Restatement Philip Pettit 3. Domination, Global Harms, and the Priority of Injustice: Expanding Transnational Republicanism James Bohman 4. Transnational Justice and Non-Domination: A Discourse-Theoretical Approach Rainer Forst 5. Domination in Global Politics: A Critique of Pettit’s Neo-Republican Model Amy Allen Part 2: History, Imperialism, and Race 6. The (In)Compatibility of Liberty and Empire in Machiavelli’s Political Thought John P. McCormick 7. Liberal Imperialism and the Dilemma of Development Thomas McCarthy 8. Race and Global Justice Charles W. Mills 9. Indigenous Peoples, Injustice, and Global Politics Duncan Ivison Part 3: Global Governance, Institutions, and Normative Theory 10. Should Republican Liberty as Non-Domination be Outsourced? John W. Maynor 11. Deprivation and Institutionally Based Duties to Aid Stefan Gosepath 12. Antipower, Agency, and the Republican Case for Global Institutional Pluralism Terry Macdonald 13. Democracy and World Law: On the Problem of Global Constitutionalism Hauke Brunkhorst
Biography
Barbara Buckinx is Associate Research Scholar in the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University.
Jonathan Trejo-Mathys is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Boston College.
Timothy Waligore is an Assistant Professor of Political Science at Pace University.






