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Call for Publications

Theme: Global Justice
Subtitle: Radical Perspectives
Publication: Global Justice: Theory, Practice, Rhetoric
Date: Special Issue
Deadline: 31.8.2015

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The Global Justice debate is, for the most part, a liberal debate.
For four decades, theorists have pondered over the exact scope of
liberal distributive justice and the precise content of our duties.
This special issue aims to take a step back and ask whether the
liberal framework is the best one to address the question of
injustice at the global level to begin with. In particular, it aims
to analyse whether the liberal paradigm lacks the conceptual tools
fully to understand, critique and remedy global injustices.

Consider the global distribution of wealth. According to the most
recent OXFAM report, 1% of the world’s population control half of
global wealth, and by 2016, they are predicted to hold more wealth
than the 99%. This is not simply a question of unequal distributions
across individuals, but also one of class. Liberal theory seeks to
redress this state of affairs through global redistribution. But is
it enough to call for redistribution of wealth and resources, or must
we interrogate the underlying power relations first? What are the
preconditions for redistribution? Are capitalist economic relations
that create and sustain this system sufficiently exposed or
critiqued? Can global justice be achieved without challenging them
first?

Alternatively, consider how the “global elite” and the “global poor”
are largely constituted by members of already advantaged and
disadvantaged groups. For instance, the UNDP suggests that women own
1% of global wealth. Extreme poverty mainly exists in the countries
of sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America and Asia, i.e. people of colour,
and former colonized peoples, are more likely to suffer from it.
People with disabilities are also more likely to live in poverty.
Gender, race, ability and sexuality also affect distributions amongst
the world’s poorest countries, and amongst those experiencing poverty
in OECD countries. Moreover, does status inequality matter because it
affects distributions of resources or because it is form of global
injustice in and of itself?

This special issue asks whether the liberal framework, which arguably
has not sufficiently and/or systematically addressed structural
issues of class, power and recognition, actually lacks the conceptual
resources to do so. It aims to understand whether more radical
approaches can help us to cast light on what global injustice
actually is and what we should do about it. What can feminist,
post-colonial, Marxist, queer theory, disability studies, critical
race theory, recognition theory, radical democratic and
post-development approaches tell us about global justice, if
anything? Do identity, history, gender, race and power matter to
global justice? Can we incorporate these critical perspectives into
the existing debates? Or must we reconfigure what constitutes global
justice or injustice if we are to make sense of the real-world
inequities that motivate critical theorists and social movements?

Suggested topics include but are not limited to:
- What is global (in)justice?
- Liberalism vs. radical approaches to global justice theory
- Class
- Intersectionality
- Power
- Specific global justice issues or approaches related to feminism,
  post-colonialism, queer theory, disability theory, critical race
  theory, recognition theory, and radical democratic and
  post-development approaches.

Deadline for submission: August 31 2015

Information on the manuscript presentation can be accessed here:
http://www.theglobaljusticenetwork.org/global/index.php/gjn/pages/view/manuscript-presentation

Information on the journal Global Justice: Theory Practice Rhetoric,
instead, can be found here:
http://www.theglobaljusticenetwork.org/global/index.php/gjn/pages/view/about-the-journal

Papers should be submitted through the journal’s electronic
submission system.

For queries, please contact Maeve McKeown
(mcke...@em.uni-frankfurt.de) or Alasia Nuti (an...@cam.ac.uk)

Editors:
Maeve McKeown (Justitia Amplificata, University of Frankfurt)
Alasia Nuti (Politics and International Studies, University of
Cambridge)

Journal website:
http://www.theglobaljusticenetwork.org




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