International ethics in a divided world
R Spegele
8 points * 3 hours per week * Second semester * Clayton
Many people claim that international relations has nothing to do with ethics and morality. This course argues that such a claim does not bear critical scrutiny. The hiving off of the ethical dimension from our understanding of international relations impoverishes the subject beyond recognition. The course establishes how our understanding of ethics is bound up with a variety of other beliefs about world politics, for example whether we accept a liberal, realist or emancipatory view as our general conceptual framework. The course also explores how the newer conceptions of ethics derived from poststructuralism, postmarxism, feminism and postmodernist shape, or are likely to shape, our conception of international ethics. Other topics covered include theories of ethics in their relation to politics; relativism; the ethics of was; the morality of nuclear deterrence; the ethics of intervention; self-determination; distributive justice; human rights; and the ecological balance.
Assessment
Written (3000 words): 50% * Examinations (3 hours): 50%
Preliminary reading
Beitz C S Political theory and international relations Princeton UP, 1979
Hoffman S Duties beyond borders Syracuse UP, 1981
Thompson J Justice and world order Routledge, 1992