Global Economic Justice
UE-EEP.00334

Teacher(s): Roser Dominic
Level: Master
Type of lesson: Lecture
ECTS: 4.5
Language(s): English
Semester(s): SS-2026

This course covers questions of justice that arise in the global economy. The first sessions introduce the necessary philosophical tools. The subsequent sessions cover topics such as tax competition, free trade, the global and intergenerational distribution of the costs of climate change, poverty eradication, democratic control of global economic institutions, remittances, etc. This course is much focused on active contributions during the semester.


Training aims

The course has two sets of goals:
1. Discussing and finding answers to pressing ethical issues that face policymakers, citizens, and business people in the global economy.
2. Knowledge of theories of justice, particularly in their extension to global and long-term questions.


Documentation

Caney, Simon. Justice Beyond Borders: A Global Political Theory. Oxford University Press, 2006.

Fleurbaey, Marc, "Normative Economics and Economic Justice", The Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (Spring 2022 Edition), Edward N. Zalta (ed.), [link]