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14.1. The Current Controversy 14.1. The Current Controversy
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14.2. False Starts And Incomplete Foundations 14.2. False Starts And Incomplete Foundations
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14.3. Responsible Provision 14.3. Responsible Provision
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14.4. Just Concern 14.4. Just Concern
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14.5. Unjustified Domination, At Home And Abroad 14.5. Unjustified Domination, At Home And Abroad
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14.6. Defining Home Territory 14.6. Defining Home Territory
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14.7. Toward More Productive Controversy 14.7. Toward More Productive Controversy
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Notes Notes
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14 The Cosmopolitanism Controversy Needs a Mid-Life Crisis
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Published:July 2013
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Abstract
To what extent should the egalitarian economic goals characteristic of social democrats extend worldwide? Philosophers’ current controversy over cosmopolitanism is meant to shed light on this question, but illumination is blocked by overly strict construals of the justice at issue, the fruitless search for a single relation on which the relevant moral claims are based, and unproductive fixation on a stringent philosophical version of cosmopolitanism. Liberation from these constraints begins with inquiry into the diverse moral foundations of domestic egalitarianism, which include duties of fair provision, mutual concern, and non-domination, yielding Rawlsian standards as helpful guidelines. These same considerations entail global political duties which are non-cosmopolitan in some ways, cosmopolitan in others: relationships among compatriots play an independent role in duties of primary importance for peoples’ lives, but transnational relationships and global responsibilities are vitally important, sometimes making transnational demands of justice more burdensome than justice toward compatriots.
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