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12 - Global justice: whose obligations?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Onora O'Neill
Affiliation:
Cambridge University
Deen K. Chatterjee
Affiliation:
University of Utah
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Summary

COSMOPOLITAN RIGHTS AND STATE OBLIGATIONS

Many respected and prominent accounts of justice have cosmopolitan aspirations yet provide a poor basis for thinking about the demands of justice in a globalizing world, and especially for thinking about economic justice. Typically they endorse some account of cosmopolitan principles of justice, then assume without argument, or without sufficient argument, that the primary agents of justice must be states. Other agents and agencies are seen as secondary agents of justice, whose contribution to justice is regulated, defined and allocated by states. These approaches to justice are cosmopolitan in assuming that justice is owed to all human beings, wherever they live and whatever their citizenship, yet anti-cosmopolitan in assuming that many significant obligations stop or vary at state or other boundaries.

There are tensions, and perhaps incoherences, in thinking that anti-cosmopolitan institutions such as bounded states and their subordinate institutions can shoulder primary obligations of cosmopolitan justice. On the surface, states are fundamentally ill-suited and ill-placed to secure or strengthen justice beyond their own borders. Their primary responsibilities are to their own maintenance and to their inhabitants. Historically the states that have secured a measure of justice beyond their borders – pax Romana, pax Britannica, pax Americana – have generally been imperial states that exercised power beyond their borders, or obliterated certain borders, or made them more porous in certain respects.

Type
Chapter
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The Ethics of Assistance
Morality and the Distant Needy
, pp. 242 - 259
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2004

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