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This book challenges the conventional approach to problems of injustice in global normative theory. It offers a radical alternative designed to transform our thinking about what kind of problem injustice is and to show how political theorists might do better in understanding and addressing it. Michael Goodhart argues that the dominant paradigm, ideal moral theory (IMT), takes a fundamentally wrong-headed approach to injustice. At the same time, leading alternatives to IMT struggle to make sense of the role values play in politics and abandon political theory's critical and prescriptive aspirations. Goodhart treats justice claims as ideological and develops an innovative bifocal theoretical framework for making sense of them. This framework reconciles realistic political analysis with substantive normative commitments, enabling theorists to come to grips with injustice as a political rather than a philosophical problem. The book describes the work that political theory and political theorists can do to combat injustice and illustrates its key arguments through a novel reconceptualization of responsibility for injustice.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Part I: Un-thinking Ideal Moral Theory
Chapter 1: The Trouble with Justice
Chapter 2: Barking up the Wrong Trees
Part II: Re-conceptualizing the Problem
Chapter 3: Getting Real?
Chapter 4: The Bifocal Approach
Chapter 5: A Democratic Account of Injustice
Part III: Political Theory for the Real World
Chapter 6: Political Theory and the Politics of Injustice
Chapter 7: Taking Responsibility for Injustice
Notes
Bibliography
Index
This is an exceptional book. It is smart, fearless, and takes on an important question. Goodhart directly and stridently takes on the dominate ways of framing the problems of global injustice. My hope for the field is that those who work on these questions in a more analytic vein will take up Goodhart's insights and framinglƒ]
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