Contents |
What is Coercion? -- How Did There Come To Be Two Kinds of Coercion? -- On Coercion -- Undue Influence as Coercive Offers in Clinical Trials -- Coercion and the State: Justification and Limits -- Coercion, Justice, and Democracy -- Democratic Legitimacy and the Reasoned Will of the People -- John Brown's Duties: Obligation, Violence, and ‘Natural Duty’ -- Coercion and the State: Legal Powers and Status -- Coercion, Neutrality, and Same-Sex Marriage -- The Cheshire Cat: Same-Sex Marriage, Religion, and Coercion by Exclusion -- Coercion and the State: National Security -- Indefinite Detention for Mega-Terrorists? -- The Great Right: Habeas Corpus -- Coercion and the International Order -- Coercion Abroad for the Protection of Rights -- Transnational Power, Coercion, and Democracy -- A Developmental Approach to the Legitimacy of Global Governance Institutions -- Global Economic Justice, Partiality, and Coercion -- International and Cosmopolitan Political Obligations. |