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Foreword | ||
Introduction | 1 | |
Ch. 1 | The Present and the Past: Iustitia, Cosmopolis and Hospitalitas | 13 |
1 | Issues of international ethics and law | 13 |
2 | Political and cultural contexts: Globalization, modern, postmodern and anti-postmodern confusions | 17 |
3 | Intellectual history: Objectivity, methodology and the dialogical approach | 27 |
4 | Iustitia: Moral minimalism and political justice | 46 |
5 | Cosmopolis: Ancient and medieval foundations | 59 |
6 | Hospitalitas: Interaction, commerce, and trade | 71 |
Ch. 2 | Vitoria and the Second Scholastic | 75 |
1 | European colonialism and Amerindian rights | 75 |
2 | Natural law and human rights | 80 |
3 | Vitoria's lecture 'On the American Indians' | 84 |
4 | Vitoria's law of nations as a theory of political justice | 90 |
5 | The problem of humanitarian intervention | 98 |
6 | The right of hospitality | 107 |
7 | An assessment of Vitoria's achievement | 113 |
Ch. 3 | The Age of Hugo Grotius | 121 |
1 | Beyond scepticism: A modern theory of natural rights | 124 |
2 | Justice or Consent? | 134 |
3 | The 'great society of states' and the law of nations | 138 |
4 | The ocean as common property and 'the sacrosanct law of hospitality' | 144 |
5 | The contributions of Francisco Suarez and Alberico Gentili | 156 |
6 | The Gortian legacy and the origins of modern international law | 162 |
Ch. 4 | In the Shadow of Leviathan: Hobbes to Wolff | 169 |
1 | Hobbes on the state of nature and sovereignty | 173 |
2 | The domestic analogy | 179 |
3 | Pufendorf I: The society of states | 189 |
4 | Pufendorf II: The imperfect right of hospitality | 201 |
5 | Wolff I: Civitas maxima, or the universal commonwealth | 208 |
6 | Wolff II: International hospitality qualified | 215 |
7 | Contextualizing theory: State practice and hospitality rights | 221 |
Ch. 5 | The Age of Enlightenment | 229 |
1 | Natural law, history, sociability, and commercial society: Pufendorf to Smith | 230 |
2 | The failure of conquest, agriculture, hospitality and free trade | 253 |
3 | The attack on and transformation of natural law | 276 |
4 | La societe generale du genre humain: Rousseau on cosmopolitanism, international relations and republican patriotism | 284 |
5 | The synthesis of natural law and state practice: Vattel and Moser | 306 |
Ch. 6 | Kant and the Ius Cosmopoliticum | 321 |
1 | Revolution and synthesis | 323 |
2 | Kant's global commonwealth | 338 |
3 | Political and cultural contexts: European perspectives on Chinese and Japanese isolationism | 350 |
4 | The scope and legitimacy of cosmopolitan right | 359 |
5 | Epilogue: The rights of strangers in the nineteenth century | 368 |
Conclusion | 391 | |
Selected Bibliography | 403 | |
Index | 417 |
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