Global social justice and international law

In Basak Cali (ed.), International Law for International Relations. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 351-378 (2009)
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Abstract

This chapter considers the key values underlying and explaining important features of international law as a system of law. It uses that value analysis as a way of interpreting international law and of asking whether, within those values, international law can be made to serve certain 'global cosmopolitan' re-distributive aims. The chapter argues that the constraints of international law mean that it is not an appropriate medium for global re-distributive goals commonly associated with theories of societal justice. Because those features and constraints are based in values that international law distinctly serves, those constraints cannot simply be ignored, overridden, or changed judicially.

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Saladin Meckled-Garcia
University College London

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