Our Podcasts

Listen to the latest insights from Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs. Tune in to hear from leading experts and thinkers, identifying and addressing the most critical ethical issues of today and tomorrow.

APR 29, 2008 Podcast

Invisible Nation: How the Kurds' Quest for Statehood Is Shaping Iraq and the Middle East

Quil Lawrence tells the story of the Kurds, the only Iraqi ethnic group that want the Americans to stay. Divided among Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and ...

APR 28, 2008 Journal

Briefly Noted

This section contains a round-up of recent notable books in the field of international affairs.

APR 28, 2008 Journal

Development as a Human Right: Legal, Political, and Economic Dimensions edited by Bard A. Andreassen and Stephen P. Marks

This book sets out to address the concepts of the right to development as well as the human rights-based approach to development. It includes contributions ...

APR 28, 2008 Journal

Planet of Slums by Mike Davis

The core of Mike Davis's book "Planet of Slums" is that the contemporary Third World urban poor are doubly cursed in ways that echo the ...

APR 28, 2008 Journal

Inventing Human Rights: A History by Lynn Hunt

Lynn Hunt's "Inventing Human Rights" develops an intriguing meditation on the relationships among art, morality, and political change. Hunt also raises questions of profound importance ...

APR 28, 2008 Journal

The Clash Within: Religion, Violence, and India's Future by Martha C. Nussbaum

Nussbaum argues that her contribution is as that of a loudspeaker, since she feels that Indian developments are wrongly ignored in the United States and ...

APR 28, 2008 Journal Online Exclusive

Torture Can Be Self-Defense: A Critique of Whitley Kaufman

In this online response, Uwe Steinhoff argues that Whitley Kaufman's denial that torturing the "ticking bomb terrorist" can be justifiable is incorrect.

APR 28, 2008 Journal Online Exclusive

The Distributive Justice Theory of Self-Defense (Response to Whitley Kaufman)

Segev argues for a theory of distributive justice and considers its implications. This theory includes a principle of responsibility that was endorsed by others within ...

APR 28, 2008 Journal

Torture and the "Distributive Justice" Theory of Self-Defense: An Assessment

The goal of this feature is to demonstrate that distributive justice is a flawed theory of self-defense and must be rejected, thus undercutting the argument ...

APR 28, 2008 Journal

Deliberation and Global Governance: Liberal, Cosmopolitan, and Critical Perspectives

This paper develops a critical analysis of deliberative approaches to global governance. After first defining global governance and with a minimalist conception of deliberation in ...