| dc.contributor.author |
Erskine, Toni |
|
| dc.date.accessioned |
2008-11-06T09:32:01Z |
|
| dc.date.available |
2008-11-06T09:32:01Z |
|
| dc.date.issued |
2002 |
|
| dc.identifier.citation |
Erskine , T 2002 , ' 'Citizen of nowhere' or 'the point where circles intersect'? Impartialist and embedded cosmopolitanisms ' Review of International Studies , vol 28 , no. 3 , pp. 457-477 . |
en |
| dc.identifier.issn |
2602105 |
|
| dc.identifier.other |
PURE: 81308 |
|
| dc.identifier.other |
dspace: 2160/840 |
|
| dc.identifier.uri |
http://hdl.handle.net/2160/840 |
|
| dc.description |
Erskine, Toni, 'Citizen of nowhere' or 'the point where circles intersect'? Impartialist and embedded cosmopolitanisms', Review of International Studies (2002) 28(3) pp.457-477 RAE2008 |
en |
| dc.description.abstract |
Ethical cosmopolitanism is conventionally taken to be a stance that requires an ‘impartialist’ point of view—a perspective above and beyond all particular ties and loyalties. Taking seriously the claims of those critics who counter that morality must have a ‘particularist’ starting-point, this article examines the viability of an alternative understanding of cosmopolitanism: ‘embedded cosmopolitanism’. Using moral justifications for patriotism as points of contrast, it presents embedded cosmopolitanism as a position that recognises community membership as being morally constitutive, but challenges the common assumption that communities are necessarily bounded and territorially determinate. |
en |
| dc.format.extent |
21 |
en |
| dc.language.iso |
eng |
|
| dc.relation.ispartof |
Review of International Studies |
en |
| dc.title |
'Citizen of nowhere' or 'the point where circles intersect'? Impartialist and embedded cosmopolitanisms |
en |
| dc.type |
Text |
en |
| dc.type.publicationtype |
Article (Journal) |
en |
| dc.identifier.doi |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0260210502004576 |
|
| dc.contributor.institution |
Department of International Politics |
en |
| dc.description.status |
Peer reviewed |
en |