Justice and Imperialism: On the Very Idea of a Universal Standard

In Shaunnagh Dorsett & Ian Hunter (eds.), Law and Politics in British Colonial Thought: Transpositions of Empire. Palgrave MacMillan. pp. 31-48 (2010)
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Abstract

How does empire become transposed onto justice? There are two kinds of question here, one historical the other conceptual, though they are often entwined. First, we may ask whether there are particular arguments about justice that were subsequently used in the justification of empire or colonialism. Or, we may seek to trace the conceptual structure of argu- ments justifying imperialism to their roots in particular philosophical views, debunking their supposed universalism.3 Second, we may ask about the very nature of the concept of global justice and the values it expresses in relation to other important values. Is the very notion of global justice imperialistic, just because it claims there are universal values applicable to everyone everywhere, whatever their particular ways of life or worldviews?

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Duncan Ivison
University of Manchester

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