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A Law of Peoples for Recognizing States : On Rawls, the Social Contract, and Membership in the International Community

معرفی کتاب «A Law of Peoples for Recognizing States : On Rawls, the Social Contract, and Membership in the International Community» نوشتهٔ Chris Naticchia، منتشرشده توسط نشر Lexington Books/Fortress Academic در سال 2016. این کتاب در فرمت epub، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است.

Which political entities should the international community recognize as member states--granting them the rights and powers of statehood and entitling them to participate in formulating, adjudicating, and implementing international law? What criteria should it use, and are those criteria defensible? From Kosovo, Palestine, and Taiwan to South Sudan, Scotland, South Ossetia, Abkhazia, and Catalonia, these questions continuously arise and constantly challenge the international community for a consistent, principled stance. In response to this challenge, Chris Naticchia offers a social contract argument for a theory of international recognition--a normative theory of the criteria that states and international bodies should use to recognize political entities as member states of the international community. Regardless of whether political entities adequately respect human rights or practice democracy, he argues, we must recognize a critical mass of them to get international institutions working. Then we should recognize secessionist entities that suffer from persistent, grave, and widespread human rights abuses by their government--and, under certain conditions, minority nations within multinational states that seek independence. We must also recognize entities whose recognition would contribute to the economic development of the least well-off entities. Drawing on the social contract tradition, and developing a broadly Rawlsian view, A Law of Peoples for Recognizing States will both challenge and appeal to a broad readership in political philosophy, international law, and international relations. "What criteria should determine which states the international community recognizes? Should we set strict minimum standards or be flexible in the interest of bringing lagging states along in their progress toward justice? Should we recognize states that have seceded from other states, and under what conditions? These are the weighty questions Naticchia (California State Univ., San Bernardino) addresses in this work. Beginning from a starting point of John Rawls's Law of Peoples, the author first provides a multichapter review of the criticism of Rawls's social contract theory of international justice. The author concedes much of the criticism and, as a solution, seeks to transform Law of Peoples into a theory of state recognition rather than of international justice. While the review of criticism may be useful to the unfamiliar, it is a lengthy and arguably unnecessary windup for a project that stands on its own merits. That is, the author largely succeeds in creating a Rawlsian theory of recognition. He does so, insightfully, by placing recognition in the realm of Rawls's nonideal theory for, if the community of nations were operating in the ideal realm, the question of recognition would be moot. Summing Up: Recommended. Upper-division undergraduates through faculty."--Bloomsbury Publishing Introduction -- The law of peoples : act I -- The law of peoples : act II -- The communitarian concession -- From justice to recognition -- The justice-based and pragmatic theoriesry -- The critical mass principle -- The justifiable secession principle -- The economic development principle -- An appraisal of international law -- Epilogue : Brian Barry's encore
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