2015
DOI: 10.1177/0191453714567736
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Toleration, decency and self-determination in The Law of Peoples

Abstract: In this article I address two objections to Rawls' account of international toleration. The first claims that the idea of a decent people does not cohere with Rawls' understanding of reasonable pluralism and sanctions the oppressive use of state power. The second argues that liberal peoples would agree to a more expansive set of principles in the first original position of Law of Peoples. Contra the first I argue that it does not properly distinguish between the use of state power aimed at curtailing differenc… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
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References 62 publications
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