Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:403Hits:19883955Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID101835
Title ProperFraternity and a global difference principle
Other Title Informationa feminist critique of Rawls and Pogge
LanguageENG
AuthorSchwarzenbach, Sibyl A
Publication2011.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Despite recent cracks in the dominant Hobbesian world picture of international relations (IR) - as the resurgence of neo-Kantianism in the area of 'global justice' bears witness - a discussion of friendship still remains absent. This article focusses on the important debate concerning the possibility of a global 'difference principle': that principle which John Rawls in A Theory of Justice considers an 'expression of fraternity' between citizens. Although in his later work Rawls explicitly denies that his difference principle applies worldwide and between 'people', others (most famously Charles Beitz and Thomas Pogge) defend a global version of it nonetheless. Yet, there is no talk of fraternity by these latter thinkers. I argue that both these positions are mistaken. Not only is an analysis of friendship necessary for any adequate account of justice - whether domestic or global - but the form this political friendship takes emerges as critical to the substantive debate.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Politics Vol. 48, No. 1; Jan 2011: p.28-45
Journal SourceInternational Politics Vol. 48, No. 1; Jan 2011: p.28-45
Key WordsGlobal Justice ;  International Difference Principle ;  Principle of Fraternity ;  Feminism ;  Political Friendship ;  Reproductive Praxis