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دانلود کتاب The Routledge handbook to rethinking ethics in international relations

دانلود کتاب کتاب راهنمای راتلج برای بازاندیشی اخلاق در روابط بین‌الملل

The Routledge handbook to rethinking ethics in international relations

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The Routledge handbook to rethinking ethics in international relations

ویرایش:  
نویسندگان:   
سری: Routledge handbooks 
ISBN (شابک) : 9781472479693, 1472479696 
ناشر: Routledge 
سال نشر: 2020 
تعداد صفحات: 429 
زبان: English 
فرمت فایل : PDF (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود) 
حجم فایل: 13 مگابایت 

قیمت کتاب (تومان) : 49,000



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فهرست مطالب

Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Table of Contents
List of contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction
	Rethinking approaches and themes in international ethics
	Structure of the book
	References
Part I New directions in international ethics
	Chapter 1 Complexity thinking and the relational ethics of global life
		Introduction
		Complexity Thinking and global life
		Relational ethics in a complex world
		Conclusion
		References
	Chapter 2 Anarchism and global ethics
		Introduction
		Anarchy and global ethics: From International Relations to anarchism
		The problems of global justice revisited
		Contesting anarchism
		Conclusion: Anarchy revisited
		Note
		References
	Chapter 3 The ethics of global encounter
		Introduction
		Kantian subjectivity
		Cinema’s rendering of the temporal and the ethical
		Hiroshima Mon Amour: The ethical negotiation continues
		The morality of forms
		Conclusion: The ethical self
		References
	Chapter 4 Time, decolonial ethics and invention
		Introduction
		Ethics and decolonial theory
		Ethical indifference to racial violence
		IR’s timeless morality?
		Timeliness of the decolonial and its possible ethics
		Conditions for decolonial ethics for a world otherwise
		Conclusion
		Note
		References
	Chapter 5 Race and ethics in International Relations
		Introduction
		Race
		Ethics
		Locating race in IR
		Taking race seriously in normative IR theory
		Conclusion
		References
	Chapter 6 Trans* theorizing for ethics in International Relations
		Introduction
		Gender Diversity in/as Ethics in Global Politics
		Invisibility, hypervisibility and the ethics of recognition in global politics
		Crossing and disidentifying in conflict resolution
		Conclusion: Moving beyond inclusivity
		Notes
		References
	Chapter 7 Emotion and ethics in International Relations
		Introduction
		Sentiments, emotions and judgements
		Emotions and sentiments in international ethics
		The politics of emotion
		Technologies of emotion
		Conclusion
		Notes
		References
Part II Ethical actors and practices in International Relations
	Chapter 8 The global dead and the ethics of mourning and remembrance
		Introduction
		On witnessing-as-ethics
		Forensic identification and memorialization at Srebrenica
		Localized mourning in Rwanda
		Memorializing soldier dead
		Mourning as ethical practice: Some conclusions
		Notes
		References
	Chapter 9 Celebrities as ethical actors: Individuals and cosmopolitan obligation
		Introduction
		Cosmopolitan ethical inquiry
		Cosmopolitanism—where are the individuals?
		Redistributive justice and human security
		Rethinking cosmopolitanism—celebrities as carriers of cosmopolitan transformation
		Celebrity cosmopolitanism in the field of redistributive justice and human security
		Conclusion
		Note
		References
	Chapter 10 Foreign policy, populism and international ethics
		Introduction
		What is populism?
		What does populist foreign policy look like?
		Populism, elitism and US foreign policy
		Conclusion
		References
	Chapter 11 The ethics of statelessness
		Introduction
		Nationality, statelessness and the state
		Statelessness in International Relations
		Statelessness in situ
		Eliminating statelessness?
		Statelessness and subjectivity
		Conclusion: The ethics of statelessness
		Notes
		References
	Chapter 12 Cross-language, sensitive research with refugees
		Introduction
		Researching refugees
		What is cross-language research?
		Case study
		Conclusion
		References
Part III Climate change, globalization and global health: Challenges for international ethics
	Chapter 13 Climate change and global displacement: Towards an ethical response
		Introduction
		The landscape
		The limitations of the Refugee Protection Regime
		Climate refugees?
		The ‘soft law’ approach
		Conclusions
		Notes
		References
	Chapter 14 Climate change and international ethics
		Introduction
		Understanding climate change and its normatively significant features
		Different dimensions of climate justice
		Different approaches to climate justice
		Climate justice and International Relations
		Conclusion
		Notes
		References
	Chapter 15 International Political Economy (IPE): Towards a contested ethics of globalization
		Introduction: Anti-Globalization 2.0
		Systemic IPE: From neo-utilitarianism to counter-hegemony
		The everyday: From non-elite to performative agency
		Critical IPE—a moralizing project?
		Note
		References
	Chapter 16 The ethics of global development
		Introduction
		The historical context
		An evolving philosophy
		Development and gender
		Introducing sustainable development
		Development as critique
		Conclusion
		References
	Chapter 17 The ethics of global health: Taking stock of the state-market-citizen nexus in global governance for health1
		Introduction
		The HIV/AIDS epidemic and the struggle for universal access to treatment
		Institutionalizing a global health governance regime during a time of ‘crisis’: Lessons from the HIV/AIDS epidemic
		HIV/AIDS as the embodiment of historical and structural injustices: Ideas and global governance initiatives from the Global South
		Conclusion: UHC and the continued influence of HIV/AIDS treatment struggles on global governance regimes
		Notes
		References
	Chapter 18 Global bioethics
		Introduction
		Global bioethics governance
		Western bias
		Inequalities of health
		Vulnerability
		Climate change
		Conclusion
		Note
		References
Part IV Technology and ethics in International Relations
	Chapter 19 Border technologies and ethics in security: Presuming consent, obscuring responsibility
		Introduction
		Securitizing border technologies
		The ethics of border security
		Consent, choice and responsibility
		Conclusion
		Note
		References
	Chapter 20 The ethics of mass surveillance
		Introduction
		The moral risks of surveillance and their management
		The moral risks of mass surveillance and their management
		The global context
		Conclusion
		Notes
		References
	Chapter 21 Drones and the ethics of war
		Introduction
		Ethics and war
		The problem of ethics
		Military-age males
		Signature strikes
		Conclusion
		References
	Chapter 22 Autonomous weapons systems and ethics in International Relations1
		Introduction
		The rise of (increasingly) autonomous (weapons) systems
		AWS: Ethical perspectives
		Dignity: The ‘Archimedean point of the AWS debate’?
		Rethinking the ethics of AWS: Towards a posthumanist ethico-politics
		Conclusion
		Notes
		References
	Chapter 23 International humanitarian and development aid and Big Data governance
		Introduction
		Data innovation in humanitarian action and development aid
		The political nature of data
		Humanitarian principles in data-driven innovation and operations
		Conclusion
		Notes
		References
Part V The ethics of global security
	Chapter 24 The ‘Responsibility to Protect’ and the ethics of humanitarianism
		Introduction
		Background: Never again or all over again?
		What is the ‘Responsibility to Protect’?
		Rising expectations: R2P as normative standard
		Challenges in practice and theory
		Conclusion
		Notes
		References
	Chapter 25 Rethinking the ethics of private war
		Introduction
		Legitimate authority
		Private actors in war
		Conclusion
		Notes
		References
	Chapter 26 Posthuman security
		Introduction
		Posthuman security’s origins in global ethics
		Widening the circle and broadening the concept of security: Posthuman security as emancipation
		Emancipation and the posthuman: New ethics or old values?
		Conclusion: Challenges to posthuman security
		References
	Chapter 27 Nonviolence in International Relations
		Introduction
		Distinguishing characteristics of nonviolent political action
		Nonviolent alternatives to militarism
		Implications for international politics
		Conclusion
		Notes
		References
Index




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