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Just Responsibility: A Human Rights Theory of Global Justice


ISBN13: 9780190662936
Published: April 2018
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £110.00
Paperback edition , ISBN13 9780190662943



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It has been well-established that many of the injustices that people around the world experience every day, from food insecurity to unsafe labor conditions and natural disasters, are the result of wide-scale structural problems of politics and economics. These are not merely random personal problems or consequences of bad luck or bad planning. Confronted by this fact, it is natural to ask what should or can we do to mitigate everyday injustices? In one sense, we answer this question when we buy the local homeless street newspaper, decide where to buy our clothes, remember our reusable bags when we shop, donate to disaster relief, or send letters to corporations about labor rights. But given the global scale of injustices related to poverty, environmental change, gender, and labor, can these individual acts really impact the seemingly intractable global social, political, and economic structures that perpetuate and exacerbate them? Moreover, can we respond to injustices in the world in ways that do more than just address their consequences?

In this book, Brooke A. Ackerly both answers the question of what should we do, and shows that it's the wrong question to ask. To ask the right question, we need to ground our normative theory of global justice in the lived experience of injustice. Using a feminist critical methodology, she argues that what to do about injustice is not just an ethical or moral question, but a political question about assuming responsibility for injustice, regardless of our causal responsibility and extent of our knowledge of the injustice. Furthermore, it is a matter that needs to be guided by principles of human rights. As she argues, while many understand human rights as political goals or entitlements, they can also guide political strategy. Her aims are twofold: to present a theory of what it means to take responsibility for injustice and for ensuring human rights, as well as to develop a guide for how to take responsibility in ways that support local and global movements for transformative politics. In order to illustrate her theory and guide for action, Ackerly draws on fieldwork on the Rana Plaza collapse in 2013, the food crisis of 2008, and strategies from 125 activist organizations working on women's and labor rights across 26 countries. Just Responsibility integrates these ways of taking political responsibility into a rich theory of political community, accountability, and leadership in which taking responsibility for injustice itself transforms the fabric of political life.

Subjects:
Human Rights and Civil Liberties
Contents:
Prologue: The Wrong Question
Introduction
Chapter 1: Where a Theory of Global Justice Begins: Grounding Global Justice and Responsibility in Everyday Injustice and Political Action
Part I: The Problem - The Politics of Injustice
Chapter 2: Injustice Itself: Complicated Causality, Power Inequalities, Normalization, and the Social Epistemologies of Injustice
Chapter 3: The Theoretical (Ir)relevance of the Unknowns of Injustice Itself
Part II: The Methodology - Doing Theory: A Feminist Critical Methodology for Grounded Normative Political Theory of Responsibility
Chapter 4: Feminist Grounded Normative Theory and Methodology
Chapter 5: Feminist Grounded Normative Methods for Just Responsibility
Part III: Just Responsibility - A Human Rights Theory of Political Responsibility for Injustice Itself
Chapter 6: The Human Rights Approach to Political Responsibility
Chapter 7: The Rights Kind of Politics
Conclusion: Just Responsibility and Political Transformation
Notes
Bibliography
Index