Description
Book SynopsisThe aim of the Reader is to introduce students to the changing ways in which politics, culture, environment and economics are being thought about and how individuals relate to the fast-moving global, political, cultural, economic and environmental agendas.
Trade ReviewDower and Williams have produced an excellent beginner's guide to current debates about global citizenship and the global issues which inspire them. Their book is essential reading for anyone that wishes to know more about the increasingly important topic of global citizenship. The rich and extensive bibliography is certain to be an excellent resource for beginners and for more experienced students of this key concept in contemporary political affairs. -- Andrew Linklater, Professor of International Relations, University of Aberystwyth Valuable discussion across a broad range of issues. -- Neal Curtis, APU, Cambridge Dower and Williams have produced an excellent beginner's guide to current debates about global citizenship and the global issues which inspire them. Their book is essential reading for anyone that wishes to know more about the increasingly important topic of global citizenship. The rich and extensive bibliography is certain to be an excellent resource for beginners and for more experienced students of this key concept in contemporary political affairs. Valuable discussion across a broad range of issues.
Table of ContentsPreface by Onora O'Neill; Glossary; Introduction; Part 1: The Idea of Global Citizenship; 1. An Emergent Matrix of Citizenship: Complex, Uneven and Fluid, Richard Falk (Princeton); 2. Global Citizenship: Yes or No?, Nigel Dower (Aberdeen); 3. Good International Citizenship, John Williams (Aberdeen); 4. Feminism and Global Citizenship, Kimberly Hutchings (Edinburgh); Part 2: Institutional Issues and the Bases of Scepticism; 5. Citizenship: European and Global,Andreas Follesdal (Oslo); 6. The Left, the Nation-State and European Citizenship, David Miller (Oxford); 7. The Transformation of Political Community: Rethinking Democracy in the Context of Globalisation, David Held (Open University/ LSE); 8. What's Wrong with Cosmopolitan Democracy?, Roland Axtmann (Aberdeen); 9. The UN and Global Citizenship, Mark Imber (St Andrews); Part 3: Ethical Bases for Global Citizenship; 10. A Global Ethic for a New Global Order, Hans Kung (Institute for Global Ethics, Tubingen); 11. Global Ethics and Global Citizenship, Nigel Dower (Aberdeen); 12. Global Justice, Global Institutions and Global Citizenship, Christien Van den Anker (Sussex); 13. Global Citizenship and Common Values, Sabine Alkire (Oxford/ World Bank); Part 4: Environment, Economic Globalisation, Technology, Immigration and Peace; 14. Global Citizenship and the Global Environment, Robin Attfield (Cardiff); 15. Living with the Big Picture: A Systems Approach to Citizenship of a Complex Planet, Christine Blackmore (Open University) & John Smyth (Paisley); 16. Economic Globalisation and Global Citizenship, David Newlands (Aberdeen); 17. Citizenship in our Globalising World of Technology, Sytse Strijbos (Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam); 18. Immigration: What does Global Justice Require?, Valeria Ottonelli (Genoa); 19. Global Citizenship and Peace, Nigel Dower (Aberdeen); Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.