L’IRG a contribué à l’édition 2011 du Global Civil Society Yearbook de la London School of Economics and Political Science par la rédaction de deux articles :
- Séverine Bellina, « A Plural Approach to the Definition of Social Justice », pp. 138-150.
- Martin Vielajus et Nicolas Haeringer, « Transitional Networks of Self-Representation : An Alternative Form of Struggle for Global Justice », pp. 88-101.
Résumé en anglais : Inspired by the globality of justice concerns in the 21st century, Global Civil Society 2011 focuses on how civil society actors around the world are framing, contesting and promoting ideas about justice, as well as their strategies to tackle the myriad injustices people face. It identifies an important shift in the globalisation of concerns about justice – citizens may claim benefits from the nation state, but increasingly groups interacting globally are collectivizing a sense of injustice. In this way global civil society has created and expanded new spaces to reinstall justice as inspiration and arbiter of laws. Combining activist and academic accounts of contemporary struggles, this yearbook provides critical insight into how civil society is remaking justice in a global arena, beyond the confines of the nation state.
Edition Palgrave Macmillan, Description sur le site de l’éditeur


