World Poverty and Human Rights
by Pogge, Thomas W.-
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Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
| General Introduction | p. 1 |
| Some cautions about our moral judgments | p. 2 |
| Four easy reasons to ignore world poverty | p. 7 |
| Sophisticated defenses of our acquiescence in world poverty | p. 13 |
| Does our new global economic order really not harm the poor? | p. 18 |
| Responsibilities and reforms | p. 26 |
| Human Flourishing and Universal Justice | p. 33 |
| Introduction | p. 33 |
| Social justice | p. 37 |
| Paternalism | p. 40 |
| Justice in first approximation | p. 43 |
| Essential refinements | p. 45 |
| Human rights | p. 50 |
| Specification of human rights and responsibilities for their realization | p. 54 |
| Conclusion | p. 56 |
| How Should Human Rights be Conceived? | p. 58 |
| Introduction | p. 58 |
| From natural law to rights | p. 60 |
| From natural rights to human rights | p. 62 |
| Official disrespect | p. 65 |
| The libertarian critique of social and economic rights | p. 70 |
| The critique of social and economic rights as "manifesto rights" | p. 73 |
| Disputes about kinds of human rights | p. 75 |
| Loopholes in Moralities | p. 77 |
| Introduction | p. 77 |
| Types of incentives | p. 79 |
| Loopholes | p. 81 |
| Social arrangements | p. 82 |
| Case 1: the converted apartment building | p. 83 |
| Case 2: the homelands policy of white South Africa | p. 86 |
| An objection | p. 88 |
| Strengthening | p. 89 |
| Fictional histories | p. 91 |
| Puzzles of equivalence | p. 93 |
| Conclusion | p. 95 |
| Moral Universalism and Global Economic Justice | p. 97 |
| Introduction | p. 97 |
| Moral universalism | p. 98 |
| Our moral assessments of national and global economic orders | p. 100 |
| Some factual background about the global economic order | p. 102 |
| Conceptions of national and global economic justice contrasted | p. 106 |
| Moral universalism and David Miller's contextualism | p. 108 |
| Contextualist moral universalism and John Rawls's moral conception | p. 110 |
| Rationalizing divergent moral assessments through a double standard | p. 114 |
| Rationalizing divergent moral assessments without a double standard | p. 116 |
| The causal role of global institutions in the persistence of severe poverty | p. 118 |
| Conclusion | p. 122 |
| The Bounds of Nationalism | p. 124 |
| Introduction | p. 124 |
| Common nationalism: priority for the interests of compatriots | p. 126 |
| Lofty nationalism: the justice-for-compatriots priority | p. 135 |
| Explanatory nationalism: the deep significance of national borders | p. 145 |
| Conclusion | p. 150 |
| Achieving Democracy | p. 152 |
| Introduction | p. 152 |
| The structure of the problem faced by fledgling democracies | p. 154 |
| Reducing the expected rewards of coups d'etat | p. 158 |
| Undermining the borrowing privilege of authoritarian predators | p. 159 |
| Undermining the resource privilege of authoritarian predators | p. 168 |
| Conclusion | p. 173 |
| Cosmopolitanism and Sovereignty | p. 174 |
| Introduction | p. 174 |
| Institutional cosmopolitanism based on human rights | p. 175 |
| The idea of state sovereignty | p. 183 |
| Some main reasons for a vertical dispersal of sovereignty | p. 187 |
| The shaping and reshaping of political units | p. 196 |
| Conclusion | p. 201 |
| Eradicating Systemic Poverty: Brief for a Global Resources Dividend | p. 202 |
| Introduction | p. 202 |
| Radical inequality and our responsibility | p. 203 |
| Three grounds of injustice | p. 205 |
| A moderate proposal | p. 210 |
| The moral argument for the proposed reform | p. 214 |
| Is the reform proposal realistic? | p. 216 |
| Conclusion | p. 220 |
| Pharmaceutical Innovation: Must We Exclude the Poor? | p. 222 |
| Introduction | p. 222 |
| The TRIPS Agreement and its aftermath | p. 224 |
| The argument from beneficial consequences | p. 230 |
| Toward a better way of stimulating research and development of essential medicines | p. 236 |
| Differential pricing | p. 238 |
| The public-good strategy for extending access to essential medicines | p. 240 |
| A full-pull plan for the provision of pharmaceuticals | p. 244 |
| Specifying and implementing the basic full-pull idea | p. 253 |
| Justifying the plan to affluent citizens and their representatives | p. 256 |
| Last Words | p. 262 |
| Notes | p. 265 |
| Bibliography | p. 314 |
| Index | p. 328 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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