This book defends the case for the expansion of the democratic
model to the global political sphere. Concentrating on the
democratic deficit of international affairs, it examines the nexus
between the phenomenon of international exclusion and the political
response of global democracy.
This distinctive position is developed through a critical survey
of the principal theories for and against global democracy. The
main rival narratives (realism, nationalism, civilizationism, and
liberal internationalism) are rebutted on grounds of failing
democratic principles of inclusion. Based on a notion of
interaction-dependent justice, these theories arguably provide a
crucial ideological support to the exclusionary attitude of the
current international system. Going beyond these exclusionary
paradigms, the book defends a model of cosmo-federalism that is
all-inclusive, multilayered and rooted.
The text adopts an interdisciplinary perspective that combines
three areas of scholarship: international political theory,
international relations and political sociology. Within them, a
number of contemporary controversies are analyzed, including the
ethical dispute on global justice, the institutional debate on
supranationalism, and the political discussion on social
emancipatory struggles. From such an interdisciplinary perspective
derives an engaged text that will be of interest to students and
researchers concerned with the key political aspects of the
discussion on globalization and democratic global order.
General
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