To refl ect this dialectic, the book is divided into three parts. Part I proposes a theory
of cosmopolitan justice. It offers an introduction to the debates and an elucidation of
the author’s theoretical position on global justice. In doing so, the author articulates an
alternative theoretical approach in relation to other positions that have been developed
in the literature. Simply called “Theory”, this part contains four chapters: an introductory
chapter, a chapter devoted exclusively to the debate around Rawls’s Law of Peoples
, a chapter that articulates the author’s proposed theoretical framework, and a