Introduction
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Nuria Sánchez Madrid
Nuria Sánchez Madrid is Full Professor at the Complutense University of Madrid, co-coordinator of the Research Group GINEDIS and member of the INSTIFEM UCM. Her lines of research are social philosophy, cultural studies, and women’s studies. With a Kant-related background, her research approaches precarity, vulnerability, oppression, and social exclusion, focusing on the historical transformation of these topics and on the role of intellectual women as cultural actors. She has published with Cambridge University Press, Routledge, Lexington Books. She is currently PI of the Complutense team of the MSCA Project JUSTLA and is co-editor-in-chief ofCon-textos Kantianos. International Journal of Philosophy. Angela Taraborrelli is Associate Professor of Political Philosophy at the University of Cagliari (Italy). Her research has focused on the political thought of Kant and Arendt and on cosmopolitanism. More recently, she has begun to focus on democracy and migration, with particular attention to the civic integration of migrants, from a cosmopolitan perspective. Her publications includeDal cittadino del mondo al mondo dei cittadini. Saggio su Kant (Asterios, 2004),Contemporary Cosmopolitanism (Bloomsbury, 2015) andHannah Arendt and Cosmopolitanism: State, Community, Worlds in Common (Bloomsbury, 2024). Her monographKant on Migration (Elements, Cambridge University Press) is forthcoming. She founded and co-directs the series of cosmopolitan studiesL’albero delle direzioni (Castelvecchi).
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
- Table of Contents V
- Acknowledgment
- Introduction 1
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Part I Normative Accounts of Kant’s Cosmopolitan Order
- Borders, Cosmopolitan Sovereignty, and Global Mobility. A Kantian Account of Political Interdependence 7
- Cosmopolitanism and Political Realism: Kant’s Double Legacy and Contemporary Political Challenge 27
- Is Humanity (Morally) Progressing? Kant’s Philosophy of History under a Cosmopolitan Perspective 43
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Part II Kant’s Cosmopolitanism: Between Past and Future
- The Rights of Foreigners. Grotius, Pufendorf, and Kant 71
- Kant’s Cosmopolitan Philosophy in the Face of the Challenges of Migration 89
- No One Is Illegal (Only) in the Kingdom of Ends: Migration and the Double Legacy of Kant’s Political Philosophy 113
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Part III Contemporary Migration Under the Lens of Kant’s Cosmopolitan Right
- The Right to Dwell (Anywhere) on Earth and the Promise of Human Community 137
- Kant, Migration, and the Cosmopolitan Right Not to Be Treated with Hostility 159
- Kant and Migration: State and Demos Borders 181
- Notes on Contributors 203
- Author Index
- Subject Index
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter I
- Table of Contents V
- Acknowledgment
- Introduction 1
-
Part I Normative Accounts of Kant’s Cosmopolitan Order
- Borders, Cosmopolitan Sovereignty, and Global Mobility. A Kantian Account of Political Interdependence 7
- Cosmopolitanism and Political Realism: Kant’s Double Legacy and Contemporary Political Challenge 27
- Is Humanity (Morally) Progressing? Kant’s Philosophy of History under a Cosmopolitan Perspective 43
-
Part II Kant’s Cosmopolitanism: Between Past and Future
- The Rights of Foreigners. Grotius, Pufendorf, and Kant 71
- Kant’s Cosmopolitan Philosophy in the Face of the Challenges of Migration 89
- No One Is Illegal (Only) in the Kingdom of Ends: Migration and the Double Legacy of Kant’s Political Philosophy 113
-
Part III Contemporary Migration Under the Lens of Kant’s Cosmopolitan Right
- The Right to Dwell (Anywhere) on Earth and the Promise of Human Community 137
- Kant, Migration, and the Cosmopolitan Right Not to Be Treated with Hostility 159
- Kant and Migration: State and Demos Borders 181
- Notes on Contributors 203
- Author Index
- Subject Index