Abstract

The process of globalization has affected the national State to the point of crisis and has increased inequality and exclusion in the world. Therefore, justice cannot keep being thought exclusively, as done in the past century, within certain limits all concerned to the State. Facing citizenship and State process of hierarchy in the new world order, a global justice theory must consider long-term the consolidation of a global constitutionalism that guarantees fundamental rights for everyone and promotes a fair distribution of the benefits generated by globalization.

Highlights

  • The process of globalization has affected the national State to the point of crisis and has increased inequality and exclusion in the world

  • a global justice theory must consider long-term the consolidation of a global constitutionalism that guarantees fundamental rights

  • promotes a fair distribution of the benefits generated by globalization

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Summary

Introduction

The process of globalization has affected the national State to the point of crisis and has increased inequality and exclusion in the world. Se presenta la propuesta de un constitucionalismo global que, como ha señalado Luigi Ferrajoli, permita a largo plazo garantizar los derechos fundamentales más allá de la diferenciación entre personas y ciudadanos de las constituciones locales.

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