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Call for Publications

Theme: Global Justice for Children
Publication: Journal of Global Justice
Date: Special Issue
Deadline: 1.6.2018

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Children are a group that has been neglected in most theories of
global justice so far, which is especially striking since children
are victims of severe injustices, face several disadvantages compared
to adults and nearly all indicators to measure global injustice show
that they are a particular deprived group. For example, children show
higher rates of poverty in most developing countries as well as in
developed countries. Many children are undernourished and
malnourished; they are exploited through forced labor, sexual abuse
and trafficking; and they are recruited as combatants in violent
conflicts. There is therefore a strong need for improvements in the
lives of children around the world.

However, what global justice demands for children and how it can be
achieved has not been fleshed out in detail. Certainly, there are
important policy approaches available, like the Convention on the
Rights of the Child, the Sustainable Development Goals, and
monitoring initiatives such as UNICEF’s Innocenti Report Cards.
Longstanding philosophical literature on children’s rights has
recently been complemented by first steps to modify existing theories
of global justice, such as the Capability Approach, to fit for
children. Much more reflection and research is needed nonetheless.
Thus the aim of this Special Issue is to advance our understanding of
the place of children in theories of global justice, both to indicate
what global justice for children demands and to establish how justice
can be achieved and sustained.

Children are different from adults in several important ways and in
regard to, for example, their physical, cognitive and emotional
development as well as their social status. But such widely held
assumptions about children as particularly vulnerable and worthy of
protection are not fully accounted for. Furthermore, the
particularity of childhood makes it necessary to think about
child-sensitive and child-specific responses to the injustices they
face and how they can be implemented on a global level. Most policy
measures that fit for adults often do not fit well for children, and
concerns of intergenerational justice may apply to their case, as
they apply for generations to come. Adult-focused moral and political
theories have to be extended, modified or substantially altered in
order to apply to children. This holds also for the applied field of
global justice, in which philosophical theories about childhood have
not had an international focus so far.

We look for contributions that will deepen and broaden understanding
of the current situation of children globally, regarding both the
injustices they face and how these injustices may be faced.
Contributions could also further advance ongoing debates on the moral
and justice-based entitlements of children and their rights (and also
duties) on a global scale. We also welcome papers that analyze and
scrutinize the responsibilities of actors and agents of global
justice for children, and writing that helps to devise policies to
improve children’s lives.

We hope to attract contributions from different theoretical
approaches and backgrounds, especially including those outside of the
mainstream of theories of global justice. Of particular interest are
contributions that look into the intersection of disadvantages and
injustices in children's lives based on their gender and sex, race,
ethnicity, indigeneity or health status. Contributions from scholars
based in the Global South are particularly encouraged.

Submission Details

Manuscripts (of 6000-8000 words) should be compiled in the following
order: Author name(s) and title on first page; title, abstract (200
words) and five keywords on second page; main text (set for blind
review); acknowledgments; references; appendices (if appropriate).

Style guidelines:
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/authors/style/layout/tf_quick1-4.pdf
http://www.tandf.co.uk/journals/authors/style/quickref/tf_F.pdf

Submission of Abstracts (500 words): 1 June 2018
Submission of Full Papers: 1 December 2018

Direct enquiries and submissions to:
[email protected]




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