<p>“This volume will prove to be rewarding reading for all graduate students and scholars in social policy, demography, ethics and political theory who are interested in population issues.” (<i>Social Policy & Administration</i>, 1 February 2013)</p> <p>“As a result the book is both accessible to the uninitiated and valuable to the initiated. Overall, it represents an excellent resource for political philosophers, population theorists and policy makers.” (<i>Political Studies Review</i>, 10 March 2012)</p> <p> </p> <p> </p> <p> </p>
- Offers a single-volume, systematic overview of philosophical issues relating to population
- Represents a unique merging of discussions of population policy with political theory
- Broad in scope, the diverse discussions will appeal to political philosophers, population specialists, and public policy makers
Acknowledgments.
Introduction: Population & Political Theory (James S. Fishkin & Robert E. Goodin)
1. Population & Ethics: Expanding the Moral Space (Sissela Bok)
2. Should We Value Population? (John Broome)
3. Regarding Optimum Population (Partha Dasgupta)
4. On Doing the Best for Our Children (Derek Parfit)
5. Shaping Future Children: Parental Rights and Societal Interest (Dan W. Brock)
6. On Future Generations' Future Rights (Axel Grosseries)
7. Justice Between Adjacent Generations: Further Thoughts (Norman Daniels)
8. Generations at War or Sustainable Social Policy in Ageing Societies (Thomas Lindh, Bo Malmberg and Joakim Palme)
9. Dependency, Difference and Global Ethic of Longterm Care (Eva Feder Kittay with Bruce Jennings and Angela Wasunna)
10. Live-in Domestics, Seasonal Workers, and Others Hard to Locate on the Map of Democracy (Joseph H. Carens)
11. Immigrants, Nations and Citizenship (David Miller)
12. Justice in Migration: A Closed Borders Utopia? (Lea Ypi )
13. The Ethics of Refugee Policy (Peter Singer and Renata Singer)
Population and Political Theory brings together current thinking on issues at the intersection of population policy and political theory. Featuring contributions from leading philosophers, political scientists, economists, and experts in social policy, this unique, broad-ranging volume makes a significant contribution to the debates surrounding one of the most profound concerns of the twenty-first century. Topics explored include population size, immigration and refugees, intergenerational justice, population characteristics and shaping children, aging, and caring labor.
Part of the acclaimed Politics and Society series, Population and Political Theory brings together leading thinkers in the fields of philosophy, political science, economics, and social policy to address issues at the convergence of population policy and political theory.
- Offers a single-volume, systematic overview of philosophical issues relating to population
- Represents a unique merging of discussions of population policy with political theory
- Broad in scope, the diverse discussions will appeal to political philosophers, population specialists, and public policy makers
—Onora O’Neill, Faculty of Philosophy, University of Cambridge
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
James S. Fishkin holds the Janet M. Peck Chair in International Communication at Stanford University where he is Professor of Communication and Professor of Political Science. He is also Director of Stanford’s Center for Deliberative Democracy and has been co-editor of the Philosophy, Politics and Society series since 1979. He is the author of a number of books on both democratic theory and the theory of justice, including When the People Speak (2009) and The Dialogue of Justice (1992).
Robert E. Goodin is a Distinguished Professor of both Philosophy and of Social and Political Theory in the Research School of Social Sciences at Australian National University; and a Corresponding Fellow of the British Academy. He is Editor of a 10-volume series of Oxford Handbooks of Political Science and the Journal of Political Philosophy. His latest book is Innovating Democracy (2008).