
How should society think about trade? Mathias Risse synthesizes this complex network of human activity into a philosophical framework, one that defines right from wrong, justice from injustice, and success from failure.

Tracing the presidencies of Franklin D. Roosevelt through Donald Trump, Joseph Nye offers an analytical toolkit for how the American public can assess the morality of past, present, and future presidential foreign policy decisions.
This book is a story of one village, Yantian, and its remarkable economic and social transformation. With Yantian as a case study, Anthony Saich shows how village outcomes are shaped by factors like path dependence, social structures, economic resources and local entrepreneurship.

Stressing humanity’s collective ownership of the earth, Mathias Risse offers a new theory of global distributive justice--what he calls pluralist internationalism--where in different contexts, different principles of justice apply. Examining fairness in trade, labor rights, global inequality, and more, Risse develops a new foundational theory of human rights.