TABLE OF CONTENTS
The third issue in EIA’s 30th anniversary volume includes essays by Nicholas Chan on the bottom-up architecture of the Paris climate change agreement, Jens Bartelson on the history of recognition, and Karin Aggestam and Annika Bergman-Rosamond on Swedish feminist foreign policy; features by Luke Glanville on self-interest and the distant vulnerable, and by Silje Aambø Langvatn on the use of public reason in international courts; a review essay by James K. Galbraith on ethics and inequality; a response by Ryan Jenkins and Duncan Purves to Robert Sparrow's article on autonomous weapon systems (EIA 30.1), with a rejoinder by Robert Sparrow; and book reviews by Michael C. Williams and Jonathan Morduch.
ESSAYS
Climate Contributions and the Paris Agreement: Fairness and Equity in a Bottom-Up Architecture
Nicholas Chan
Recognition: A Short History
Jens Bartelson
Swedish Feminist Foreign Policy in the Making: Ethics, Politics, and Gender [Full Text]
Karin Aggestam and Annika Bergman-Rosamond
FEATURES
Self-Interest and the Distant Vulnerable
Luke Glanville
Should International Courts Use Public Reason?
Silje Aambø Langvatn
REVIEW ESSAY
Ethics and Inequality: A Strategic and Practical View
James K. Galbraith
RESPONSE
Robots and Respect: A Response to Robert Sparrow
Ryan Jenkins and Duncan Purves
Robots as “Evil Means”? A Rejoinder to Jenkins and Purves
Robert Sparrow
REVIEWS [Full Text]
Realpolitik: A History
John Bew
REVIEW BY MICHAEL C. WILLIAMS
Can Microfinance Work? How to Improve Its Ethical Balance and Effectiveness
Lesley Sherratt
REVIEW BY JONATHAN MORDUCH
BRIEFLY NOTED [Full Text]