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Justice, Community and Dialogue in International Relations

A philosophical hermeneutic study of the problem of cultural diversity and international morality.

Richard Shapcott (Author)

9780521784474, Cambridge University Press

Paperback, published 8 November 2001

276 pages
22.9 x 15.2 x 1.6 cm, 0.41 kg

Justice, Community, and Dialogue in International Relations is well written and well argued, and makes a provocative contribution to the study of international ethics and community." Perspectives on Politics

Shapcott investigates the question of justice in a culturally diverse world, asking if it is possible to conceive of a universal or cosmopolitan community in which justice to difference is achieved. Justice to difference is possible, according to Shapcott, by recognising the particular manner in which different humans identify themselves. Such recognition is most successfully accomplished through acts of communication, and in particular, conversation. The accounts of understanding developed by H. G. Gadamer provide a valuable way forward in this field. The philosophical hermeneutic account of conversation allows for the development of a level of cosmopolitan solidarity that is both 'thin' and universal, and which helps to provide a more just resolution of the tension between the values of community and difference. Students and scholars of international relations, international ethics and philosophy will be interested in this original study.

Introduction
1. Beyond the cosmopolitan/communitarian divide
2. Communication and community in interpretative theories of international relations
3. Emancipation and legislation: the boundaries of conversation in poststructuralism and the critical theory of IR
4. Philosophical hermeneutics: understanding, practical reasoning and human solidarity
5. Philosophical hermeneutics and its critics
6. Towards a thin cosmopolitanism.

Subject Areas: International relations [JPS], Social theory [JHBA], Social & political philosophy [HPS]

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