Part I: The (Re)-Internationalization of State-Minority
Relations
1: Introduction
2: From Post-War Universal Human Rights to Post-Cold War Minority
Rights
Part II: Making Sense of Liberal Multiculturalism
3: The Forms of Liberal Multiculturalism
4: The Origins of Liberal Multiculturalism: Sources and
Preconditions
5: Evaluating Liberal Multiculturalism in Practice
Part III: Paradoxes in the Global Diffusion of Liberal
Multiculturalism
6: The European Experiment
7: The Global Challenge
8: Conclusion: The Way Forward?
Bibliography
Winner of the North American Society of Social Philosophy Book Prize
Will Kymlicka is the author of five books published by Oxford
University Press: Liberalism, Community, and Culture (1989),
Contemporary Political Philosophy (1990; second edition 2002),
Multicultural Citizenship (1995), which was awarded the Macpherson
Prize by the Canadian Political Science Association, and the Bunche
Award by the American Political Science Association, Finding Our
Way: Rethinking Ethnocultural Relations in Canada (1998); and
Politics in the
Vernacular (2001). He is also the editor of Justice in Political
Philosophy (Elgar, 1992), The Rights of Minority Cultures (OUP,
1995), and co-editor of Ethnicity and Group Rights (NYU Press,
1997),
Citizenship in Diverse Societies (OUP, 2000), Can Liberal Pluralism
Be Exported ? (OUP, 2001), Language Rights and Political Theory
(OUP, 2003), and Multiculturalism and the Welfare State (OUP,
2006). He is currently a Professor of Philosophy at Queen's
University.
`...it is the first of its kind in breadth and depth of
research...A theoretician, Kymlicka is at home writing
conceptually, but his writing is wonderfully clear...he has offered
a hugely important volume, and a readable one at that.'
Jenifer Curtis, in Globe and Mail
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