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Index
Contents Chapter 1: Introduction: A Global Practice of Civil Disobedience
1.1 Introduction 1.2 Decency as a Shared Standard of Global Justice 1.3 Decency as Grounding a Global Practice of Civil Disobedience 1.4 The Approach 1.5 The Limits of Liberalism and the Positive Contribution of Non-liberal Viewpoints 1.6 Outline of Chapters References
Chapter 2: Decency, the Right to Disobey, and Non-domination
2.1 Introduction 2.2 Peoples and Decency 2.3 Decency as the Basis of Moral Considerability for the Right to Disobey 2.4 Decency, the Rule of Law, and Non-domination 2.5 A Note on Democracy, Egalitarianism, and Hierarchy 2.6 Conclusion References
Chapter 3: Undocumented Disobedients as a Special Class of Civil Disobedients
3.1 Introduction 3.2 Undocumented Migration as a Special Case of Non-­citizen Civil Disobedience 3.3 The Undocumented Are Not Refugees 3.4 Are the Undocumented Civil Disobedients Proper? 3.5 Why the Undocumented Have a Moral Right to Disobey: Internal Domination and Persecution 3.6 The Plenary Powers Doctrine and Uptake for Dissent and Contestation 3.7 Conclusion References
Chapter 4: Institutionalizing the Human Right of the Undocumented to Be Domestic Political Participants
4.1 Introduction 4.2 Interdependency of Human Rights and Political Participation 4.3 The Insecurity of Rights, and Power-Asymmetries Between Citizens and the Undocumented 4.4 The Urgent Human Right to Be a Political Participant, Wherever One Is 4.5 Institutionally Embedding the Right to Be a Political Participant, Wherever One Is 4.6 A Proposal for Transitory Hierarchical Mini-Publics 4.7 Conclusion References
Chapter 5: Unfair Terms of Global Cooperation and the Fair Equality of Liberty Between Peoples
5.1 Introduction 5.2 Civil Disobedience and Representation 5.3 Disobedience by Multinational Cosmopolitan Citizens from Liberal-Democracies 5.4 Disobedience by Multinational Cosmopolitan Citizens Without Egalitarianism 5.5 Disobedience by Peoples of Different States 5.6 Ongoing Controversy over Global Inequities 5.7 Conclusion References
Chapter 6: Executive Prerogative and Disobedient Disclosure of Government Secrets
6.1 Introduction 6.2 Lockean Prerogative 6.3 Reinterpreting Civil Disobedience as Disobedient Disclosure 6.4 Some Problems for the Reinterpretation 6.5 Reclaiming the Recursive Reinterpretation 6.6 Transparency and Leniency 6.7 Extending the Analysis to Traditional-Hierarchical Societies 6.8 Conclusion References
Chapter 7: Disobedience as an Expression of Global Solidarity and Redefining Disobedience in a Global Perspective
7.1 Introduction 7.2 A Global Civil Disobedience Practice and Global Solidarity 7.3 Redefining Civil Disobedience in a Global Perspective 7.4 The Addition to the Minimal List of Human Rights in Law of Peoples of the Human Right to Be a Political Participant, Wherever One Is 7.5 The Recognition and Acceptance Among the International Community of the Entailments of the Fair Value of Liberty Between Rich and Poor Peoples, as Prescribed by the Law of Peoples 7.6 The Recognition and Acceptance Among the International Community of the Entailments of Competing Valid Claims Based on Decency and the Ends of Government Made by Executives and Disclosers 7.7 Conclusion References
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