Book DE-PAE-1 [*] DEEEP-BOOK-2015-073

Hegemony and Global Citizenship. Transitional Governance for the 21st Century

Robert C. Paehlke

2014
Palgrave Macmillan
ISBN: 9781137476012

Abstract: Americans felt part of 'the greatest nation on earth' and many of the world's citizens, with obvious exceptions, were warily comfortable with America's hegemonic power. That comfort faded dramatically during the Bush administration's rejection of Kyoto and its invasion of Iraq. Many, including many Americans, began to rethink global governance. A more democratic approach to international relations is necessary, especially one that addresses rising inequality worldwide and global financial instability driven by deregulation initiated by national governments. Citizens also demand a collective capacity to protect the natural systems on which we depend and more Americans now ask about the opportunity costs of military spending. Humankind shares a common fate. Accordingly, we need a democratic global capacity to act on common concerns. Rethinking our understanding of citizenship as global rights and obligations as well as national ones is in order, as is active global citizenship as an alternative to hegemony's limits and perils.

Keyword(s): Global Citizenship ; Political philosophy ; public policy ; transnational law ; Global Governance

The record appears in these collections:
Books, Guides & Methodologies > Books
DEAR and Education

[*] This refers to the hardcopy version which you can find in the CONCORD library. You are invited to our office to browse our resources.

 Record created 2015-04-21, last modified 2015-11-17


External link:
Download fulltext
Full report
Rate this document:

Rate this document:
1
2
3
 
(Not yet reviewed)