Abstract

Empire, Race and Global Justice, edited by Duncan Bell, is the first collection of essays devoted to exploring global justice through the recent renovation associated with the broader ‘historical turn’ in IR, political theory and international law, decentring the debate from its core Anglo-American analytical tradition. More importantly, the volume offers a sophisticated and refined dialogue between two contrasting ethical and historical waves of political and legal theory. By historicizing, transnationalizing and delinking the debate on global justice from its original ethical roots and concerns, it provides a counterpoint, that is, a historically grounded, critical and interpretative approach. As such, it opens a new agenda with a new set of questions and multiple alternative visions, thus reorienting the field towards the historical study of global injustices.

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