Cover page

Title page

Copyright page

Acknowledgements

I am grateful to several people and groups of people for enabling me to write this book. Thanks are due to David Held for encouraging me to do it, and to the two anonymous readers at Polity who gave me valuable feedback on the original proposal and on a draft of the text. Particular thanks are due to Joe Hoover and Henry Radice, who very kindly gave up their time to read and comment on a full version of the manuscript. Above all, I am grateful for the feedback of the many students I have taught on courses on global and international ethics over the years at Wolverhampton, Edinburgh and, most recently, the London School of Economics. Without what I have gained from all of those classes and tutorials, this book would not have been possible. Needless to say, any faults and errors are my responsibility alone.

Kimberly Hutchings

July 2009

Preface to the Second Edition

In the eight years since writing the first edition of this book, Global Ethics has become much more established as a field of ethical inquiry. The Journal of Global Ethics has become a key forum for the development of debates within the field, and several books and collections with the term ‘Global Ethics’ in their title have been published. Nevertheless, many of the fundamental arguments explored in the first edition remain foundational for work in Global Ethics. In preparing the second edition, I have introduced new material only when it reflects innovative theoretical developments, such as the growth of work in ‘non-western’, postcolonial and decolonial ethics, or where treatment of the literatures on particular topics, such as the ethics of climate change, migration or war, was in need of expansion. It remains the case that there are important topics within Global Ethics, such as trade, finance, digital communication, bioethics or health, that are not treated here. This is an introductory volume, a starting point for ethical thinking about an ever-broadening range of ways in which commonalities and interconnections are growing in the contemporary world. Such a book cannot be exhaustive in its coverage.

I am grateful to my students at Queen Mary University of London. The breadth of experience that they bring to thinking about Global Ethics has taught me a great deal in the last three years.

Kimberly Hutchings

October 2017

Abbreviations

ANC

African National Congress

FGC

female genital cutting

FGM

female genital mutilation

GDP

gross domestic product

ICTY

International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia

IGO

international governmental organization

INGO

international non-governmental organization

MDG

Millennium Development Goal

MNC

multinational corporation

NATO

North Atlantic Treaty Organization

PMSC

private military and security companies

R2P

responsibility to protect

SDG

sustainable development goals

TRC

truth and reconciliation commission

UDHR

Universal Declaration of Human Rights

UN

United Nations

UNSCR

United Nations Security Council Resolution

WTO

World Trade Organization