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  • Poverty, Agency, and Human Rights

    Poverty, Agency, and Human Rights by Meyers, Diana Tietjens;

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      • Publisher's listprice GBP 137.50
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    65 690 Ft

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    Product details:

    • Publisher OUP USA
    • Date of Publication 11 September 2014

    • ISBN 9780199975877
    • Binding Hardback
    • No. of pages374 pages
    • Size 163x239x27 mm
    • Weight 734 g
    • Language English
    • 0

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    Short description:

    Poverty, Agency, and Human Rights collects thirteen new philosophical papers that focus on the diverse ways poverty impacts the agency of the poor, the reasons why poverty alleviation schemes should also promote the agency of beneficiaries, and the fitness of the human rights regime to secure both economic development and free agency.

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    Long description:

    Poverty, Agency, and Human Rights collects thirteen new essays that analyze how human agency relates to poverty and human rights respectively as well as how agency mediates issues concerning poverty and social and economic human rights. No other collection of philosophical papers focuses on the diverse ways poverty impacts the agency of the poor, the reasons why poverty alleviation schemes should also promote the agency of beneficiaries, and the fitness of the human rights regime to secure both economic development and free agency.

    The book is divided into four parts. Part 1 considers the diverse meanings of poverty both from the standpoint of the poor and from that of the relatively well-off. Part 2 examines morally appropriate responses to poverty on the part of persons who are better-off and powerful institutions. Part 3 identifies economic development strategies that secure the agency of the beneficiaries. Part 4 addresses the constraints poverty imposes on agency in the context of biomedical research, migration for work, and trafficking in persons.

    Meyers's collection is an important contribution to the philosophical discussions surrounding moral responsibility for global injustice, global poverty, and moral agency more generally. Meyers's book and the essays contained in it provide a crucial starting point for more discussions to come, which will hopefully lead to more developed and nuanced ways of understanding the complex links between poverty and agency. Only when we fully understand these links between human action and the moral wrongs of poverty will we be in a position to effectively motivate and enact the changes necessary to finally eradicate avoidable, human-caused poverty on a global scale. This project is a profound step in that direction.

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    Table of Contents:

    Introduction, Diana Tietjens Meyers
    Part 1: Thinking through the Meanings of Poverty
    1. Surviving Poverty, Claudia Card
    2. Poverty Knowledge, Coercion, and Social Rights: A Discourse Ethical Contribution to Social Epistemology, David Ingram
    3. Rethinking Coercion for a World of Poverty and Transnational Migration, Diana Tietjens Meyers
    Part 2: Ethical Responses to Poverty
    4. Responsibility for Violations of the Human Right to Subsistence, Elizabeth Ashford
    5. Global Poverty, Decent Work, and Remedial Responsibilities: What the Developed World Owes to the Developing World and Why, Gillian Brock
    6. Trafficking in Human Beings: Partial Compliance Theory, Enforcement Failure, and Obligations to Victims, Leslie P. Francis and John Francis
    7. "Are My Hands Clean?" Responsibility for Global Gender Disparities, Alison Jaggar
    Part 3: Promoting Development and Ensuring Agency
    8. Agency and Intervention: How (Not) to Fight Global Poverty, Ann Cudd
    9. Empowerment Through Self-Subordination?: Microcredit and Women's Agency, Serene J. Khader
    10. Paradoxes of Development: Rethinking the Right to Development, Amy Allen
    Part 4: Transnational Transactions and Human Rights
    11. Poverty, Voluntariness, and Consent to Participate in Research, Alan Wertheimer
    12. Children's Rights, Parental Agency and the Case for Non-coercive Responses to Care Drain, Anca Gheus
    13. Human Rights and Global Wrongs: The Role of Human Rights Discourse in Responses to Trafficking, John Christman
    Index

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