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  • Reform, Resist, Create: Institutional Cosmopolitanism and Duties Toward Suprastate Institutions

    Author(s)
    Cabrera, Angel
    Griffith University Author(s)
    Cabrera, Luis L.
    Year published
    2018
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    While there have been numerous recent analyses of the legitimacy of suprastate governance institutions such as the World Trade Organization (WTO) or United Nations Security Council, few accounts have considered individual duties in relation to those institutions, broadly analogous to suprastate political obligation. Identified in this chapter are three categories of duties that should be salient to a range of institutions. These include duties to support their reform, to resist specific institutional features or practices, and to reject the continued operation of some institutions and support the creation of alternate ones. ...
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    While there have been numerous recent analyses of the legitimacy of suprastate governance institutions such as the World Trade Organization (WTO) or United Nations Security Council, few accounts have considered individual duties in relation to those institutions, broadly analogous to suprastate political obligation. Identified in this chapter are three categories of duties that should be salient to a range of institutions. These include duties to support their reform, to resist specific institutional features or practices, and to reject the continued operation of some institutions and support the creation of alternate ones. These duties would correspond roughly to how well an institution would appear to fit into a global institutional scheme that actually would fulfill cosmopolitan aims for rights promotion and protections and related global moral goods. An implication is that the current global system itself is a candidate for rejection, given its inherent tendencies toward the gross underfulfillment of individual rights.
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    Book Title
    Institutional Cosmopolitanism
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190905651.003.0006
    Subject
    Political science
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/383161
    Collection
    • Book chapters

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