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This panel addresses contemporary debates on global justice and injustice under conditions of deep structural inequality, overlapping crises, and limited political will. The contributions examine how rights, duties, responsibility and accountability are negotiated across contexts such as climate injustice, post-conflict societies, global trade, and transnational solidarity. Rather than assuming ideal conditions of compliance or effective institutions, the papers engage with non-ideal and transitional settings in which justice is partial, contested, and often strategically constrained. Together, the panel asks how global justice can be meaningfully theorized and pursued amid persistent injustice and unequal power relations.
| Title | Details |
|---|---|
| Restorative Justice and the Kurdish Conflict: Preparing for Peace in Turkey | View Paper Details |
| Forgetting After Injustice: The Moral Limits of Institutional Memory in Political Renewal | View Paper Details |
| Just Trade: When, If Ever, Are Trade-Related Incentives Morally Permissible? | View Paper Details |
| Climate Justice in an Unjust World - Learning from Transitional Justice | View Paper Details |
| Global Solidarity? Philanthropic Legitimacy, Justice, and Vulnerabilities in Japanese Foundations | View Paper Details |