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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: John R. MorssPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.249kg ISBN: 9781138257009ISBN 10: 1138257001 Pages: 168 Publication Date: 11 November 2016 Audience: College/higher education , General/trade , Tertiary & Higher Education , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPreface, 1 Law, People, Peoples, 2 From Hobbes to Rawls: Covenants, Social Contracts and the Law of Peoples, 3 Historiography of the Present: Collectives, Colonies and the Chronicle of International Law, 4 Grouphood, Rights and Waldron’s Warning: Respecting the Collective, 5 Statehood, Consent, Complicity: Defining the Collective, 6 From Peoples to People? Self-determination, Identity, Territory, 7 Cultures, Attachments, Minorities, Movements, 8 International Relations and International Law: Rethinking Statehood and Sovereignty, 9 Toward a Law of People, References, IndexReviews’ ...addresses one of the most important questions facing the world today: what are the proper boundaries between persons, peoples, and global justice? John Morss calls attention to the many areas of law in which all human beings belong to a single collective, with one justice to guide us and one international law to keep us safe’. Mortimer Sellers, University of Baltimore, USA ’At a time when renewed hope and anxiety surround the mobilization of peoples, whether as Netizens, Arab Spring crowds, or insurgents, John Morss provides an engaging and timely account of the grammars of the collective in legal thought, international legal thought especially. In a commanding revisitation of jurisprudential writing from the seventeenth century to the twenty-first, Morss re-orients that tradition adroitly around the collective. Collectives, Morss argues, are not merely aggregations of individualism, nor half-way houses to statehood. They merit close attention in their own right. Under Morss’ guidance, reading international law for its plurals turns out to be wonderfully revelatory and suggestive. This book merits widespread and attentive reading.’ Fleur Johns, University of Sydney and Co-Director, Sydney Centre for International Law, Australia ' ...addresses one of the most important questions facing the world today: what are the proper boundaries between persons, peoples, and global justice? John Morss calls attention to the many areas of law in which all human beings belong to a single collective, with one justice to guide us and one international law to keep us safe'. Mortimer Sellers, University of Baltimore, USA 'At a time when renewed hope and anxiety surround the mobilization of peoples, whether as Netizens, Arab Spring crowds, or insurgents, John Morss provides an engaging and timely account of the grammars of the collective in legal thought, international legal thought especially. In a commanding revisitation of jurisprudential writing from the seventeenth century to the twenty-first, Morss re-orients that tradition adroitly around the collective. Collectives, Morss argues, are not merely aggregations of individualism, nor half-way houses to statehood. They merit close attention in their own right. Under Morss' guidance, reading international law for its plurals turns out to be wonderfully revelatory and suggestive. This book merits widespread and attentive reading.' Fleur Johns, University of Sydney and Co-Director, Sydney Centre for International Law, Australia Author InformationDr John R. Morss is Senior Lecturer, School of Law, and member of the Centre for Citizenship and Globalization, at Deakin University, Australia. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |