Hegemony and Global Citizenship Transitional Governance for the 21st
The first decade of the 21st century raised many questions regarding hegemonic power. This system for managing global affairs has significant costs and limits. This book explores one alternative, global citizenship and more democratic global governance -
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Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to University of Western Ontario - PalgraveConnect - 2015-12-28
Hegemony and Global Citizenship
10.1057/9781137476029 - Hegemony and Global Citizenship, Robert C. Paehlke
Series Editor: John Martin Gillroy, Professor of International Relations and Founding Director of the Graduate Programs In Environmental Policy Design at Lehigh University. http://ir.cas2.lehigh.edu/content/john-martin-gillroy A Note from the Editor: This new series for Palgrave-Macmillan seeks, for the first time at a major publisher, to take the philosophical and public policy foundations of legal practice seriously, that is, not in terms of bits and pieces of theory or policy used to illustrate empirical claims, but as a systematic and integral basis for the study of codified law. The series will pursue scholarship that integrates the superstructure of the positive law with its philosophical and public policy substructure producing a more three-dimensional understanding of transnational law and its evolution, meaning, imperatives and future. For the purposes of this series, transnational law includes the traditional categories of comparative and international law and seeks to understand the role of, not just states, but persons, international organizations, NGOs and governments that create or use law that transcends sovereign states. The series encourages an interdisciplinary approach to transnational law and seeks research reports, original manuscripts or edited collections that explore the essence of legal practice in both the public policy arguments that inform legal discourse and the philosophical precepts that create the logic of concepts inherent in policy debate. The series aims to expand the types and use of philosophical and policy paradigms exploring the nature of transnational law, so that its empirical dimensions are better illuminated for practioners and scholars alike. An Evolutionary Paradigm for International Law: Philosophical Method, David Hume, and the Essence of Sovereignty By John Martin Gillroy Radicalizing Rawls: Global Justice and the Foundations of International Law By Gary Chartier Hegemony and Global Citizenship: Transitional Governance for the 21st Century By Robert C. Paehlke
10.1057/9781137476029 - Hegemony and Global Citizenship, Robert C. Paehlke
Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to University of Western Ontario - PalgraveConnect - 2015-12-28
Philosophy, Public Policy, and Transnational Law
Transitional Governance for the 21st Century Robert C. Paehlke
10.1057/9781137476029 - Hegemony and Global Citizenship, Robert C. Paehlke
Copyright material from www.palgraveconnect.com - licensed to University of Western Ontario - PalgraveConnect - 2015-12-28
Hegemony and Global Citizenship
hegemony and global citizenship
Copyright © Robert C. Paehlke, 2014. First published in 2014 by PALGRAVE MACMILLAN® in the United States—a division of St. Martin’s Press LLC, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY 10010. Where this book is distribu
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