Introduction, Hugo El Kholi and Jun-Hyeok Kwak
Part 1: Critical reflections on Parochialism and Western-Centrism
1. Liberal Internationalism, Intervention and Moral Imperialism, Kok-Chor Tan
2. On the Compatibility of Global Democratic Justice and Confucianism, Julian Culp
3. Are Political Conceptions of Global Justice Parochial? Hugo El Kholi
Part 2: Contextual Appraisal
4. Anticipating Global Justice: Confucianism and Mohism in Classical China, George Tsai
5. Chinese Political Culture and the International Order, Li Shaomeng
6. State Coercion, "Tianxia", and the Idea of Egalitarian Global Justice, Tan Ankui
Part 3: East Asian Insights into Global Justice
7. All-under-Heaven and Liberty, Yu Yih Soong
8. A Confucian "Law of Peoples": Mencius’s Thought on Global Justice, Wang Binfan
9. Global Justice without a Center: Reappraisal of Tianxia with Non-domination, Jun-Hyeok Kwak
10. A Topography of Japanese Socialism: Kotoku Shusui and Global Justice, Umemori Naoyuki
Biography
Hugo El Kholi is a Research Fellow in the Department of Philosophy (Zhuhai) at Sun Yat-sen University, China. His current research interests are global justice, Enlightenment philosophy and contemporary Chinese political thought.
Jun-Hyeok Kwak is Professor of the Department of Philosophy (Zhuhai) at Sun Yat-sen University, China. His main research interests lie at the crossroads of political philosophy from Socrates to Machiavelli, contemporary political theory and comparative political philosophy.






