•  123
    This paper reviews the contribution of Hannah Arendt's 1963 monograph, On Revolution, to the theme of this collection: “contestatory cosmopolitanism.” I am critical of normative interpretations of the text that treat it as a wholesale rejection of the French revolutionary tradition and as a tribute either to American constitutionalism, in more liberal readings, or to the council system of direct democracy, in more radical readings. I read it against this doctrinal grain as a dialectical analysis…Read more
  •  168
    Cosmopolitanism
    Routledge. 2007.
    The idea of cosmopolitanism is increasingly in circulation both in the social sciences and in the language of everyday life. There is, however, much uncertainty about what it means, what it refers to and what role it plays in social scientific thinking. In this book Robert Fine explores the concept of cosmopolitanism, its contribution to critical thought, and its application to a number of pressing political issues: taming global marketisation, resisting the resurgence of nationalism and fundame…Read more
  •  34
    Kosmopolitismus a socialni teorie
    Filosoficky Casopis 51 (3): 407-429. 2003.
    [Cosmopolitanism and social theory; ]
  •  71
    Crimes Against Humanity: Hannah Arendt and the Nuremberg Debates
    European Journal of Social Theory 3 (3): 293-311. 2000.
    The institution of crimes against humanity at Nuremberg in 1945 was an event which marked the birth of cosmopolitan law as a social reality. Cosmopolitan law has existed as an abstract idea at least since the writings of Kant in the late eighteenth century, but Nuremberg turned the notion of humanity from a merely regulative idea into a substantial entity. Crimes against humanity differ significantly from the traditional categories of international law: war crimes and crimes against peace. While…Read more
  •  288
    Cosmopolitanism and human rights: Radicalism in a global age
    Metaphilosophy 40 (1): 8-23. 2009.
    Abstract: The cosmopolitan imagination constructs a world order in which the idea of human rights is an operative principle of justice. Does it also construct an idealisation of human rights? The radicality of Enlightenment cosmopolitanism, as developed by Kant, lay in its analysis of the roots of organised violence in the modern world and its visionary programme for changing the world. Today, the temptation that faces the cosmopolitan imagination is to turn itself into an endorsement of the exi…Read more
  •  120
    Rationing or Stewardship in Pursuit of Just Medical Reform
    American Journal of Bioethics 11 (7). 2011.
    The American Journal of Bioethics, Volume 11, Issue 7, Page 22-23, July 2011
  •  197
    Jurgen Habermas's Theory of Cosmopolitanism
    with Will Smith
    Constellations 10 (4): 469-487. 2003.
    In this paper we explore the sustained and multifaceted attempt of Jürgen Habermas to reconstruct Kant's theory of cosmopolitan right for our own times. In a series of articles written in the post‐1989 period, Habermas has argued that the challenge posed both by the catastrophes of the twentieth century, and by social forces of globalization, has given new impetus to the idea of cosmopolitan justice that Kant first expressed. He recognizes that today we cannot simply repeat Kant's eighteenth‐cen…Read more
  •  331
    Kant’s theory of cosmopolitanism and hegel’s critique
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 29 (6): 609-630. 2003.
    s theory of cosmopolitan right is widely viewed as the philosophical origin of modern cosmopolitan thought. Hegel’s critique of Kant’s theory of cosmopolitan right, by contrast, is usually viewed as regressive and nationalistic in relation to both Kant and the cosmopolitan tradition. This paper reassesses the political and philosophical character of Hegel’s critique of Kant, Hegel’s own relation to cosmopolitan thinking, and more fleetingly some of the implications of his critique for contempora…Read more
  •  23
    In this highly innovative book Robert Fine compares three great studies of modern political life: Hegel's _Elements of the Philosophy of Right_, Marx's _Capital_ and Hannah Arendt's _Origins of Totalitarianism_, and argues that they are all profoundly radical texts, which jointly contribute to our understanding of the modern world. Fine maintains that these works are far more revealing when read together than in opposition, and draws a direct parallel between Hegel’s critique of social forms of …Read more
  •  113
    The core argument in this paper is that, to reconstruct the last unwritten section on Judging in Hannah Arendt's Life of the Mind , it is necessary to address what Arendt was doing with the book as a whole and how the different parts relate internally to one another. This is no easy matter, especially as the existing sections on Thinking and Willing are quite different in tone from one another. My proposition is that the work should be read as a critique of the life of the `modern' mind, and esp…Read more
  •  20
    Social Theory After the Holocaust
    Liverpool University Press. 2000.
    In what has become a famous quotation, the philosopher Theodor Adorno commented that to write poetry "after Auschwitz" is barbaric. If the holocaust is an "event" that may legitimately be described as unspeakable, it is hard to see why poetry deserves more opprobrium than other ways of framing it, including what may broadly be called social theory. After all, if social theory were once guilty of ignoring the holocaust, it has also exhibited the barbarism of reason involved in transforming this "…Read more
  • Ian Fraser's Hegel And Marx: The Concept Of Need (review)
    Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 51 126-130. 2005.