01866cam a22004091a 4500001001300000003000600013005001700019008004100036010001700077015001900094016001800113020002600131020002300157020002300180020002600203035003900229040002400268042000800292050001500300100003400315245005500349250001200404260003200416300002800448336002600476500002800502504007000530505037800600520024900978650001801227650001301245650001701258650001201275650004401287650003901331856008601370ocn156812632OCoLC20241217131735.0200127s2008 enk 000 0 eng  a 2019304890 aGBA7780072bnb7 a0140167312Uk a9780745641430q(hbk.) a0745641431q(hbk.) a074564144Xq(pbk.) a9780745641447q(pbk.) a(OCoLC)156812632z(OCoLC)153576964 bengcGAFCSC LIBRARY apcc00aJC571bP751 aPogge, Thomas Winfried Menko.10aWorld poverty and human rights /cby Thomas Pogge. a2nd ed. aCambridge :bPolity,c2008. avii, 284 pages ;c24 cm atextbtxt2rdacontent aPrevious edition: 2002. aIncludes bibliographical references (pages [265] -327) and index.0 aHuman flourishing and universal justice -- How should human rights be conceived? -- Loopholes in moralities -- Moral universalism and global economic justice -- The bounds of nationalism -- Achieving democracy -- Cosmopolitanism and sovereignty -- Eradicating systemic poverty : brief for a global resources dividend -- Pharmaceutical innovation : must we exclude the poor? aThomas Pogge tries to explain how most of the population of this planet can excuse world poverty. A mere one or two % of the wealth of the richer nations could help in eradicating much of the poverty but there's a slim chance of that happening. 0aHuman rights. 0aPoverty. 2aHuman Rights 2aPoverty 6aDroits de l'homme (Droit international) 7aPoverty.2fast0(OCoLC)fst01074093423The Charles H. Maxson Fund Home Pageuhttp://hdl.library.upenn.edu/1017.12/366250