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Nancy Fraser has written 7 work(s)
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Paperback:
9781500455545 | Createspace Independent Pub, July 14, 2014, cover price $12.99
Hardcover:
9781844679850 | Verso Books, April 24, 2013, cover price $95.00
Paperback:
9781844679843 | 1 edition (Verso Books, April 9, 2013), cover price $24.95
Paperback:
9780231146814 | Reprint edition (Columbia Univ Pr, September 30, 2010), cover price $26.00
Miscellaneous:
9780231519625 | Ebrary, February 1, 2010, cover price $15.99
Product Description: When reporter, Kate Brogan, and her ex-husband vice cop, Matthew Kelley, both end up investigating local psychic Olga Limas, Kate realizes the fluff piece of journalism she'd anticipated might just turn into something more. Out to debunk the woman's claim of being able to guide seance participants into the future, both hers and Matt's skepticism is put to the test when they find themselves transported to 2065...read more
Paperback:
9781601544612 | Lightning Source Inc, March 30, 2009, cover price $12.99 | About this edition: When reporter, Kate Brogan, and her ex-husband vice cop, Matthew Kelley, both end up investigating local psychic Olga Limas, Kate realizes the fluff piece of journalism she'd anticipated might just turn into something more.
Until recently, struggles for justice proceeded against the background of a taken-for-granted frame: the bounded territorial state. With that "Westphalian" picture of political space assumed by default, the scope of justice was rarely subject to explicit dispute. Today, the scope of justice is hotly contested, as human-rights activists and international feminists join critics of structural adjustment and the WTO in targeting injustices that cut across borders. Seeking to re-map the bounds of justice on a broader scale, these movements are challenging the view that justice can only be a domestic relation among fellow citizens. As their claims collide with those of nationalists and Westphalian democrats, we witness new forms of "meta-political" contestation in which the scale of justice is an object of explicit dispute. Under these conditions, there is no avoiding an issue that had once seemed to go without saying: What is the proper frame for theorizing justice? Faced with a plurality of competing scales, how do we know which scale of justice is truly just? Scales of Justice tackles this issue. Interrogating struggles over globalization, Nancy Fraser reconstructs the theory of justice for a post-Westphalian world. Revising her widely discussed theory of redistribution and recognition, she introduces representation as a third, "political," dimension of justice, which permits us to re-conceive scale and scope as questions of justice. Seeking to re-imagine political space for a globalizing world, she revisits the concepts of democracy, solidarity, and the public sphere; the projects of critical theory, the World Social Forum, and second-wave feminism; and the thought of Habermas, Rawls, Foucault, and Arendt.
Hardcover:
9780231146807 | Columbia Univ Pr, December 8, 2008, cover price $75.00
9780745644868 | Polity Pr, December 8, 2008, cover price $64.95 | About this edition: Until recently, struggles for justice proceeded against the background of a taken-for-granted frame: the bounded territorial state.
Paperback:
9780745644875 | Polity Pr, December 8, 2008, cover price $24.95
Hardcover:
9780415404662, titled "Misrecognition, Social Inequality and Social Justice: Nancy Fraser and Pierre Bourdieu" | 1 edition (Routledge, September 17, 2007), cover price $180.00
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