By Christian Schemmel

Disputes between political theories based on an ideal of impartiality and theories allowing for (some degree of) partiality in one’s moral and political reasoning are a long-standing feature of the history of political thought. The last great wave of this dispute is familiar to everyone as ‘the communitarian critique of liberalism’, and the burgeoning literature on international, or global, justice has taken that debate to a new level.
Published:
2010
DOI:
doi.org/10.21248/gjn.3.0.12
Online available:
www.theglobaljusticenetwork.org