Table of contents for Critical international relations theory : citizenship, state and humanity / Andrew Linklater.

Bibliographic record and links to related information available from the Library of Congress catalog.

Note: Contents data are machine generated based on pre-publication provided by the publisher. Contents may have variations from the printed book or be incomplete or contain other coding.


Counter
 CONTENTS 
Acknowledgments								 
Introduction									 
PART ONE: THE PROBLEM OF COMMUNITY			
1 ¿Men and Citizens¿ in International Relations				
The Rights and Duties of Citizens						 
The Historicist Theory of International Relations				 
The Philosophers of History					 		
 
2 The Problem of Community in International Relations		
The Problem of Community in 
the Modern States-System							
Kant and Marx								 
The Normative Dimension							 
The Sociological Dimension							 
The Practical Dimension							
Conclusion									
3 The Achievements of Critical Theory					
Subject and Object								
The reconstruction of 
historical materialism: from 	
production to discourse ethics						 
Discourse ethics: implications for 
Politics									 
Conclusion									 
PART TWO: THE PROBLEM OF CITIZENSHIP			 
4 What is a Good International Citizen? 		 			
5 The Good International Citizen and 
the Kosovo Crisis							 	
Beyond Westphalia							 	
New Rules of Recognition						 	
The Good International Citizen and 	
¿Humanitarian War¿	 			 			
Conclusion								 
6 Citizenship and Sovereignty in the 
Post-Westphalian State						 	
Bull on the European State					 	 
Current Developments in Europe			 		 
Critical Theory, Modes of Exclusion and 
Transnational Democracy		 			 	 
Citizenship								 
Post-Westphalian Communities					 
Conclusion								 
7 Cosmopolitan Citizenship					 
Critics of Cosmopolitan Citizenship			 
The Sphere of Cosmopolitan Duty				 
The Sphere of Cosmopolitan Rights				 
The Sphere of Cosmopolitan Democracy			 
Conclusion								 
PART THREE: THE PROBLEM OF HARM 			 
8 Citizenship, Humanity and 
Cosmopolitan Harm Conventions					 
Cosmopolitan Harm Conventions				 	 
The English School: Civility in 
International Relations						 
Modernity: Its Nature and Potential			 		 
Modernity in Comparative Perspective			 	 
Conclusion								 
9 The Problem of Harm in World Politics: 
Implications for the Sociology of States-Systems			 
Wight¿s Pessimism							 
Two Concepts of Cosmopolitanism				 	 
Ancient Greece							 
The Problem of Harm in World Politics				 
Varieties of Harm							 
Modernity and Progress						 
The Universalization of the Harm Principle				 
Conclusion								 
10 Norbert Elias, The Civilizing Process 
and International Relations						 
The English School, Civility and International 
Order									 
Civilization and its Discontents				 	 
The Modern Civilizing Process					 
A Global Civilizing Process?					 
Cosmopolitan Emotions, Modernity and the 
Sociology of States-Systems					 	 
Conclusion								 
Chapter Eleven Towards a Sociology of Global Morals 
with an Emancipatory Intent					 
Universalizable Sympathies						 
Solidarity and Suffering						 
Collective Learning Processes and Social Evolution			 
Towards a Sociology of Global Morals				 
Conclusion								 
Notes									 
References								 
Index									 	

Library of Congress Subject Headings for this publication:

World citizenship.
International relations.
Critical theory.