UID:
almahu_9949849543302882
Format:
1 online resource (224 pages).
Edition:
First edition.
ISBN:
1-351-78186-3
,
1-315-20139-9
,
1-351-78187-1
Series Statement:
Routledge Global Cooperation Series
Content:
"At a time when globalization has side-lined many of the traditional, state-based addressees of legal accountability, assigning responsibility is contested in many transnational fields. There, political, economic, and social actors struggle to define the collectively binding rules of moral conduct. It is still unclear how blame is allocated in the new, highly-differentiated, multi-actor governance arrangements by which today's world is characterised. Moral Agency and the Politics of Responsibility investigates how actors in complex governance arrangements negotiate, delegate and distribute responsibility. This book asks how moral duties can be defined beyond the territorial and legal confines of the nation-state, how the moral agency of individuals and collective actors can be enhanced; and how obligations and accountability mechanisms for a post-national world, in which responsibility remains vague, ambiguous and contested, can be established. Using both empirical and theoretical perspectives, the book explores the politics of responsibility that plays out as responsibility relationships emerge, develop, and change. This book is perfect for scholars of International Relations, Politics, Philosophy and Political Economy with an interest in the increasingly popular topics of moral agency and responsibility"--
Note:
Includes index.
,
part, I Challenging traditional notions of moral agency and responsibility --
,
chapter 1 Introduction --
,
Moral agency and the politics of responsibility /
,
chapter 2 Democratic moral agency --
,
Altering unjust conditions in practices of responsibility /
,
chapter 3 Promoting responsible moral agency --
,
Enhancing institutional and individual capacities /
,
chapter 4 Technologically blurred accountability? --
,
Technology, responsibility gaps and the robustness of our everyday conceptual scheme /
,
part, II Demanding and contesting responsibility in the international community --
,
chapter 5 The lack of ‘responsibility’ in the responsibility to protect /
,
chapter 6 Responsibility contestations --
,
A challenge to the moral authority of the UN Security Council /
,
part, III Practising the politics of responsibility in global governance --
,
chapter 7 In search of equity --
,
Practices of differentiation and the evolution of a geography of responsibility /
,
chapter 8 The business of responsibility --
,
Supply chain practice and the construction of the moral lead firm /
,
chapter 9 Pluralisation of authority in post-conflict peacebuilding --
,
The re-assignment of responsibility in polycentric governance arrangements /
,
part, IV De-constructing responsibility in an interconnected world --
,
chapter 10 Responsibilising through failure and denial --
,
Governmentality as double failure /
,
chapter 11 Bringing therapeutic governance back home --
,
US responsibility and drug-related organised crime in the Americas /
,
chapter 12 Distributed responsibility --
,
Moral agency in a non-linear world /
,
chapter 13 Conclusion --
,
Practising the politics of responsibility /
Additional Edition:
ISBN 1-138-70743-0
Language:
English
DOI:
10.4324/9781315201399