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图书目录:Preface
PART I INTRODUCTION 1 Stories of Democracy: Old and New 1.1 Models of democracy 1.2 Democracy, globalization and international governance 1.3 The limits of democratic political theory and international relations theory PART II ANALYSIS: THE FORMATION AND DISPLACEMENT OF THE MODERN STATE 2 The Emergence of Sovereignty and the Modern State 2.1 From divided authority to the centralized state 2.2 The modern state and the discourse of sovereignty 3 The Development of the Nation-state and the Entrenchment of Democracy 3.1 War and militarism 3.2 States and capitalism 3.3 Liberal democracy and citizenship 4 The Inter-state System 4.1 Sovereignty and the Westphalian order 4.2 The international order and the United Nations system 4.3 The states system vs. global politics? 5 Democracy, the Nation-state and the Global Order I 5.1 Disjuncture 1: international law 5.2 Disjuncture 2: internationalization of political decision-making 5.3 Disjuncture 3: hegemonic powers and international security structures 6 Democracy, the Nation-state and the Global Order II 6.1 Disjuncture 4: national identity and the globalization of culture 6.2 Disjuncture 5: the world economy 6.3 The new context of political thought PART III RECONSTRUCTION: FOUNDATIONS OF DEMOCRACY 7 Rethinking Democracy 7.1 The principle of autonomy 7.2 The terms of the principle of autonomy 7.3 The idea of a democratic legal state 8 Sites of Power, Problems of Democracy 8.1 Democratic thought experiment 8.2 Power, life-chances and nautonomy 8.3 Power clusters 8.4 Seven sites of power 9 Democracy and the Democratic Good 9.1 The democratic public law 9.2 The obligation(s) to nurture self-determination 9.3 Ideal, attainable and urgent autonomy 9.4 The democratic good PART IV ELABORATION AND ADVOCACY: COSMOPOLITAN DEMOCRACY 10 Political Community and the Cosmopolitan Order 10.1 The requirement of the democratic good: cosmopolitan democracy 10.2 Democracy as a transnational, common structure of political action 10.3 New forms and levels of governance 11 Markets, Private Property and Cosmopolitan Democratic Law 11.1 Law, liberty and democracy 11.2 The economic limits to democracy? 11.3 The rationale of political intervention in the economy 11.4 The entrenchment of democracy in economic life 11.5 Forms and levels of intervention 11.6 Private property, 'access avenues' and democracy 12 Cosmopolitan Democracy and the New International Order 12.1 Rethinking democracy and the international order: the cosmopolitan model 12.2 Cosmopolitan objectives: short- and long-term 12.3 Concluding reflections Acknowledgements References and Select Bibliography Index |