Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Main library A4 | Faculty of Economics & Political (Political) | 321.8 E.J.D (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | 1 | Available | 00015442 |
No cover image available | No cover image available | |||||||
321.8 B.A.Q قضايا التحول الديمقراطى فى المغرب : مع مقارنة بمصر و الاردن / | 321.8 B.A.S. صحيفتي : نضال من أجل التشغيل والديمقراطية : حصيلة أربع سنوات من العمل النيابي المعارض / | 321.8 B.R.D Democracy : A reader / | 321.8 E.J.D Democracy and Its Others / | 321.8 M.C.D Democratic theory : essays in retrieval / | 321.8 N.N.M الممارسة الديمقراطية فى عهد الرئيس السادات / | 321.8 P.A.C Crises of democracy / |
includes index
includes reference bibliographies
IntroductionChapter 1: Ethnos, Demos, and Foreignness1.1. Playing Politics: Ethnos and the (Re)Unification of the DemosChapter 2: Hospitality or War? A Foreigner Approaches2.1. The Piraeus2.2. Cephalus, the Metic2.3. Polemarchus, the Metic2.4. Thrasymachus, the Indecidable Foreigner Chapter 3: The Fearful Origins of Sovereignty in the Social Contract Tradition 3.1. The Fearful Origins of Sovereignty in Hobbes3.2. The Fearful Origins of Sovereignty in Locke3.3. The Fearful Origins of Sovereignty in RousseauChapter 4: The Qualities of Sovereignty in the Social Contract Tradition 4.1. Hobbes' Absolute Sovereign 4.2. Locke's Neutral Umpire4.3. Rousseau's General Will4.4. A Brief Summary of SovereigntyChapter 5: Foreignness, Sovereignty, and the Social Contract Tradition5.1. Territorial Exclusions5.2. Homogeneous Unity and the Sovereign Exclusion of Foreignness5.3. Foreignness in Hobbes' Theorization of Sovereignty5.4. Foreignness in Locke's Theorization of Sovereignty5.5. Foreignness in Rousseau's Theorization of SovereigntyChapter 6: The Naturalization of Artificial Sovereignty and Foreignness 6.1. Hobbes' Naturalization of Artificial Sovereignty6.2. Locke's Naturalization of Artificial Sovereignty6.3. Rousseau's Naturalization of Artificial Sovereignty6.4. The Naturalization of Artificial ForeignnessChapter 7: The Foreign-Sovereign7.1. The Quasi-Regime Chapter 8: Foreign Unto It-self, The Democratic Nation-State 8.1. Democracy's Others and the Protection of the Democratic Nation-State 8.2. Foreign Unto It-Self: Autoimmune Democracy8.3. Democracy to Come and the Foreign-SovereignChapter 9: The Foreign-Citizen at the Threshold of Democratic Cosmopolitanism9.1. Universal Hospitality at the Border Between the Moral and Legal9.2. Unconditional Hospitality and the Cosmopolitanism to Come9.3. Democratic Iterations9.4. The Foreign-CitizenBibliographyIndex
There are no comments on this title.