In his landmark work World Poverty and Human Rights, Thomas Pogge offers a novel approach to understanding the nature and extent of the obligations that citizens of wealthy states owe to their less fortunate counterparts in poor states. Pogge argues that the wealthy have weighty obligations to aid the global poor because the wealthy coercively impose institutions on the poor that leave their human rights, particularly their subsistence rights avoidably unfulfilled. Thus, Pogge claims that the wealthy states\u27 obligations to the poor are ultimately generated by their negative duties, that is, their duties to refrain from harming. In this essay, I argue that Pogge cannot successfully appeal to negative duties in way that would appease his c...
This paper outlines both Thomas Pogge’s thesis that the global order helps perpetuate extreme povert...
Stimulated by the challenging reactions of four critics, this essay clarifies and elaborates a view ...
Thomas Pogge has argued powerfully for the view that states which are responsible for severe poverty...
In his landmark work World Poverty and Human Rights, Thomas Pogge offers a novel approach to underst...
In this article I consider Thomas Pogge’s thesis that affluent countries are violating the human rig...
Thomas Pogge has argued, famously, that ‘we’ are violating the rights of the global poor insofar as ...
This paper is inspired by Thomas Pogge’s book World Poverty and Human Rights. Pogge explores the mor...
This dissertation aims to show that Thomas Pogge’s central contention – that citizens and government...
This work presents an analysis of Thomas Pogge\u27s approach to the problem of world poverty as pres...
This dissertation is concerned with the moral-philosophical dimensions of global poverty and inequal...
Who has the duty to guarantee that basic human rights are fulfilled globally? This is one of the cen...
Do we violate human rights when we cooperate with and impose a globalinstitutional order that engend...
The immense inequalities between the world’s poor and the world’s rich have compelledphilosopher Tho...
Thomas Pogge claims “that, by shaping and enforcing the social conditions that foreseeably and avoid...
The goal of this dissertation is to answer two questions: Is global poverty unjust, such that coerci...
This paper outlines both Thomas Pogge’s thesis that the global order helps perpetuate extreme povert...
Stimulated by the challenging reactions of four critics, this essay clarifies and elaborates a view ...
Thomas Pogge has argued powerfully for the view that states which are responsible for severe poverty...
In his landmark work World Poverty and Human Rights, Thomas Pogge offers a novel approach to underst...
In this article I consider Thomas Pogge’s thesis that affluent countries are violating the human rig...
Thomas Pogge has argued, famously, that ‘we’ are violating the rights of the global poor insofar as ...
This paper is inspired by Thomas Pogge’s book World Poverty and Human Rights. Pogge explores the mor...
This dissertation aims to show that Thomas Pogge’s central contention – that citizens and government...
This work presents an analysis of Thomas Pogge\u27s approach to the problem of world poverty as pres...
This dissertation is concerned with the moral-philosophical dimensions of global poverty and inequal...
Who has the duty to guarantee that basic human rights are fulfilled globally? This is one of the cen...
Do we violate human rights when we cooperate with and impose a globalinstitutional order that engend...
The immense inequalities between the world’s poor and the world’s rich have compelledphilosopher Tho...
Thomas Pogge claims “that, by shaping and enforcing the social conditions that foreseeably and avoid...
The goal of this dissertation is to answer two questions: Is global poverty unjust, such that coerci...
This paper outlines both Thomas Pogge’s thesis that the global order helps perpetuate extreme povert...
Stimulated by the challenging reactions of four critics, this essay clarifies and elaborates a view ...
Thomas Pogge has argued powerfully for the view that states which are responsible for severe poverty...