PHIL 767

Global Justice


Please note: this is archived course information from 2020 for PHIL 767.

Description

This course examines issues related to global justice, such as: What, if anything, are people owed as a matter of justice in the global context? If there are duties of justice, what grounds these? Is distribution to assist the global disadvantaged justified? If so, on what basis should distribution proceed? Are global taxes defensible? Which restrictions on immigration, if any, are justified? Are protectionist policies in trade justified? Can globalisation be better harnessed to assist the global poor? How can we better assist those in poor countries who are trying to help themselves?

In the latter part of the course we will consider issues concerning the basis and limits of sovereignty and issues related to when (if ever) intervention is justified at the international level. Some questions considered here include: Is military intervention ever justified for humanitarian purposes (such as, in recent years in the case of Rwanda)? Can preventive or pre-emptive war ever be justified using the just war framework? Issues of global governance and democracy at the global level may also be considered.

Assessment

Coursework only

View the course syllabus

Availability 2020

Semester 2

Lecturer(s)

Coordinator(s) Professor Gillian Brock

Reading/Texts

None.

Recommended Reading

TBA.

Points

PHIL 767: 15 points

Restrictions

PHIL 310