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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: M. Sánchez-FloresPublisher: Palgrave Macmillan Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.402kg ISBN: 9780230613522ISBN 10: 0230613527 Pages: 205 Publication Date: 10 September 2010 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsReviews<p> This is an ambitious and, at times, inspiring book. Sanchez-Flores makes a powerful case for a compassionate cosmopolitanism that is genuinely, universally inclusive. --Kimberly Hutchings, Professor of International Relations, London School of Economics <p> Monica Judith Sanchez-Flores's new book, Cosmopolitan Liberalism, is an intellectually lively, wide ranging, and timely contribution to one of the most significant debates in recent political philosophy and social theory. The strength and originality of her approach is evident from the outset, is impressively sustained throughout, and succeeds where others have at best claimed plausibility for positions that rested ultimately on old and compromised arguments. Sanchez-Flores drags liberalism into the twenty-first century and makes no apology for ditching most of the background assumptions and historical context to which, hitherto it has clung. <p>This book opens new and much wider horizons for contemporary political theory. This is no longer an argument, however sophisticated, between Enlightenment and Romanticism. The driving force of her argument sweeps aside the parochial modernity and Eurocentrism of standard debates and places the issue at the centre of a genuinely global, world historical perspective that embraces the vast diversity of human societies over time and space. There is no possibility, as a result, of 'saving' liberalism through an appeal to the presumed residual universality of reason (however flimsy), or f human rights (however contested). The genuine universality to which, nonetheless, she appeals is rooted (for modern western societies) in, but is not exclusive to, an older Judaic-Christian tradition that insists on the primal reality of compassion and love. In this sense Sanchez-Flores is not afraid to promote a practical, as well as theoretical, hermeneutics of the heart. <p>The entire book is written with passion as well as commitment, clarity as well as subtlety, and withe <p> This is an ambitious and, at times, inspiring book. Sanchez-Flores makes a powerful case for a compassionate cosmopolitanism that is genuinely, universally inclusive. --Kimberly Hutchings, Professor of International Relations, London School of Economics <p> Monica Judith Sanchez-Flores's new book, Cosmopolitan Liberalism, is an intellectually lively, wide ranging, and timely contribution to one of the most significant debates in recent political philosophy and social theory. The strength and originality of her approach is evident from the outset, is impressively sustained throughout, and succeeds where others have at best claimed plausibility for positions that rested ultimately on old and compromised arguments. Sanchez-Flores drags liberalism into the twenty-first century and makes no apology for ditching most of the background assumptions and historical context to which, hitherto it has clung. <p>This book opens new and much wider horizons for contemporary political theory. This is no longer an argument, however sophisticated, between Enlightenment and Romanticism. The driving force of her argument sweeps aside the parochial modernity and Eurocentrism of standard debates and places the issue at the centre of a genuinely global, world historical perspective that embraces the vast diversity of human societies over time and space. There is no possibility, as a result, of 'saving' liberalism through an appeal to the presumed residual universality of reason (however flimsy), or f human rights (however contested). The genuine universality to which, nonetheless, she appeals is rooted (for modern western societies) in, but is not exclusive to, an older Judaic-Christian tradition that insists on the primal reality of compassion and love. In this sense Sanchez-Flores is not afraid to promote a practical, as well as theoretical, hermeneutics of the heart. <p>The entire book is written with passion as well as commitment, clarity as well as subtlety, and witha <p>“This is an ambitious and, at times, inspiring book. Sánchez-Flores makes a powerful case for a compassionate cosmopolitanism that is genuinely, universally inclusive.”--Kimberly Hutchings, Professor of International Relations, London School of Economics<p> <p> Mónica Judith Sánchez-Flores's new book, Cosmopolitan Liberalism, is an intellectually lively, wide ranging, and timely contribution to one of the most significant debates in recent political philosophy and social theory.  The strength and originality of her approach is evident from the outset, is impressively sustained throughout, and succeeds where others have at best claimed plausibility for positions that rested ultimately on old and compromised arguments. Sánchez-Flores drags liberalism into the twenty-first century and makes no apology for ditching most of the background assumptions and historical context to which, hitherto it has clung. <p> <p>This book opens new an <p> This is an ambitious and, at times, inspiring book. Sanchez-Flores makes a powerful case for a compassionate cosmopolitanism that is genuinely, universally inclusive. --Kimberly Hutchings, Professor of International Relations, London School of Economics <p> Monica Judith Sanchez-Flores's new book, Cosmopolitan Liberalism, is an intellectually lively, wide ranging, and timely contribution to one of the most significant debates in recent political philosophy and social theory. The strength and originality of her approach is evident from the outset, is impressively sustained throughout, and succeeds where others have at best claimed plausibility for positions that rested ultimately on old and compromised arguments. Sanchez-Flores drags liberalism into the twenty-first century and makes no apology for ditching most of the background assumptions and historical context to which, hitherto it has clung. <p>This book opens new and much wider horizons for contemporary political theory. This is no longer an argument, however sophisticated, between Enlightenment and Romanticism. The driving force of her argument sweeps aside the parochial modernity and Eurocentrism of standard debates and places the issue at the centre of a genuinely global, world historical perspective that embraces the vast diversity of human societies over time and space. There is no possibility, as a result, of 'saving' liberalism through an appeal to the presumed residual universality of reason (however flimsy), or f human rights (however contested). The genuine universality to which, nonetheless, she appeals is rooted (for modern western societies) in, but is not exclusive to, an older Judaic-Christian tradition that insists on the primal reality of compassion and love. In this sense Sanchez-Flores is not afraid to promote a practical, as well as theoretical, hermeneutics of the heart. <p>The entire book is written with passion as well as commitment, clarity as well as subtlety, and witho Author InformationM. J. SÁNCHEZ FLORES is Adjunct Professor at the Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas (CIDE), Mexico City and also an instructor of sociology and politics at the Thomson Rivers University in British Columbia, Canada. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |