On Global Citizenship: James Tully in Dialogue
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Description
Contents
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Language
English
ISBN
Unknown
Cover
HalfTitle
Series
Title
Copyright
Contents
List of Contributors
Series Editor’s Foreword
Part One Lead Essay
1 On Global Citizenship
1. Introduction: Global citizenship as negotiated practices
2. Two modes of citizenship: Preliminary sketch
Section One: Modern Citizenship
Section Two: Diverse Citizenship
Part Two Responses
2 The Authority of Civic Citizens*
1. Dictatorial versus democratic authority
2. In authority’s family
3. Authority of command versus authority of connection: Five differences
4. Conclusion
3 James Tully’s Agonistic Realism
1. Raymond Geuss’s realism
2. James Tully’s realism
3. Agonistic realism
4 Pictures of Democratic Engagement: Claim-Making, Citizenization and the Ethos of Democracy*
1. Contestation through the articulation of demands
2. James Tully and practices of citizenization15
3. Further reflections
6. Contestation, claim-making and a democratic ethos
5 To Act Otherwise: Agonistic Republicanism and Global Citizenship*
1. Introduction
2. Global virtue ethics: Agonistic citizenship and the arts of the self
3. Political violence, empire and the limits of global justice
4. Conclusion
6 Civil Disobedience as a Practice of Civic Freedom
1. Introduction
2. Rethinking civil disobedience
3. Conclusion
7 Modern versus Diverse Citizenship: Historical and Ideal Theory Perspectives
1. Methodological issues
2. An ideal theory approach
3. Adjusting Tully’s analysis
4. Conclusion
8 Instituting Civic Citizenship
1. Orientations
2. Institutions
3. Non-sovereign institutions
4. Conclusion
Part Three Reply
9 On Global Citizenship: Replies to Interlocutors
1. Introduction
2. Anthony Simon Laden
3. Bonnie Honig and Mark Stears
4. Aletta J. Norval
5. Duncan Bell
6. Robin Celikates
7. Andrew Mason
8. Adam Dunn and David Owen
Bibliography
Index
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