Justice, the State, and International Relations

MacMillan Publishing Company (1998)
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Abstract

This text offers a review of historical traditions of international ethical and political theory in the light of modern developments in political philosophy. McCarthy provides a defence of natural law tradition, and in response to the criticism of natural law that, along with Kantianism, it is too abstract to produce a substantive account of justice and rights, constructs an argument for basic, agency-grounded rights. Through his study, the author attacks realism and the modern cosmopolitan theories that have been too little debated.

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