Multi-stakeholder Deliberation for (Global) Justice: An Approach from Modern Civic Republicanism
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Authors
Author (Corporation)
Publication date
2014
Typ of student thesis
Course of study
Collections
Type
04A - Book part
Editors
Schepers, Stefan
Kakabadse, Andrew
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Supervisor
Parent work
Rethinking the Future of Europe. A Challenge of Governance
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DOI of the original publication
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Volume
Issue / Number
Pages / Duration
10-27
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Publisher / Publishing institution
Palgrave Macmillan
Place of publication / Event location
London
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Abstract
Multi-stakeholder initiatives (MSI) are important in dealing with (global) governance gaps in many dimensions – economic, ecological, social and cultural. However, their effectiveness is under scrutiny by both academics and practitioners. In this Chapter, Nathan attempts to derive the minimal and common conditions – freedom as non-domination, and recognition – for input justice on deliberation for MSI, critiquing liberal deliberative democracy and advocating modern civic republicanism. He further challenges the idea of the common good and invites us to consider the common concerns of the choices. This Chapter aims to encourage debate and discussion on the possibility and plausibility of innovating governance structures based on these minimal and common conditions for input justice for (global) multi-stakeholder deliberation.
Keywords
multi-stakeholder initiative (MSI), multi-stakeholder deliberation, modern civic republicanism, governance, justice
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ISBN
978-1-137-02402-2
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Language
English
Created during FHNW affiliation
Yes
Strategic action fields FHNW
Publication status
Published
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Expert editing/editorial review
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License
Citation
Nathan, G. (2014). Multi-stakeholder Deliberation for (Global) Justice: An Approach from Modern Civic Republicanism. In S. Schepers & A. Kakabadse (Eds.), Rethinking the Future of Europe. A Challenge of Governance (pp. 10–27). Palgrave Macmillan. http://hdl.handle.net/11654/5138