Bibliography of Work on "Global Justice" (Leiter)
Patrick O'Donnell has kindly sent along this bibliography on global justice: Download global_justice_bibliography.doc . Hopefully, some readers will find it of value. Feel free to suggest additions in the comments section.

I would add the following:
Brock, Gillian. "The Difference Principle, Equality of Opportunity," Journal of Moral Philosophy 2(3) (2005): 333-51.
Brooks, Thom. "Cosmopolitanism and Distributing Responsibilities," Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 5(3) (2002): 92-97.
Fuller, Lisa L. "Poverty Relief, Global Institutions, and the Problem of Compliance," Journal of Moral Philosophy 2(3) (2005): 285-97.
Green, Michael. "Social Justice, Voluntarism, and Liberal Nationalism," Journal of Moral Philosophy 2(3) (2005): 265-83.
Hayward, Tim. "Thomas Pogge's Global Resources Dividend: A Critique and an Altenative," Journal of Moral Philosophy 2(3) (2005): 317-32.
Hellesten, Sirkku. "Gloabl Justice and the Demands for Global Responsibility," Journal of Moral Philosophy 2(3) (2005): 371-79.
Journal of Moral Philosophy 2(3) (2005) -- special issue on global justice
Naticchia, Chris. "The Law of Peoples: The Old and the New," Journal of Moral Philosophy 2(3) (2005): 353-69.
Overland, Gerhard. "Poverty and the Moral Significance of Contribution," Journal of Moral Philosophy 2(3) (2005): 299-315.
Posted by: Thom Brooks | May 22, 2006 at 10:05 AM
Thanks Thom, I was hoping at a later date to add articles (like Adil Haque's critique--available at SSRN--of Nagel's work on this subject). And I've since expanded the compilation a bit, which I'll send to anyone who e-mails me: libertyequalitysolidarity.psod 'at' cox.net
And thanks Brian for making this available.
Also, check out the new site: the IPT Beacon http://www.international-political-theory.net/ for recent and related articles.
Best wishes,
Patrick
Posted by: Patrick S. O'Donnell | May 22, 2006 at 04:58 PM
A crucial book, on which many contemporary theories of global justice rely: "Perpetual Peace", by Immanuel Kant
Posted by: Cristian Dimitriu | May 22, 2006 at 10:59 PM
You should add Caney, Simon. Justice Beyond Borders: A Global Political Theory (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004)
Posted by: iain law | May 23, 2006 at 02:43 AM
Can I add a further plug for this new site?
The IPT Beacon is produced under the supervision of a distinguished editorial board which includes many of the most prominent theorists currently writing on global justice - and on other questions in International Political Theory (IPT) too. We feature a survey of forty journals and recommend a selection of the very best recent IPT articles. The website also provides access to numerous pre-prints, free samples, videos, and so on.
Posted by: Tim Hayward | May 23, 2006 at 06:18 AM
Beitz, Charles (2000): "Rawls's Law of Peoples", Ethics 110:4, Jul. 2000, 669-696.
Cohen, Joshua & Sabel, Charles (2006): "Extra Rempublicam Nulla Justitia?", Philosophy and Public Affairs, 34:2. Response to Nagel.
Julius, A.J. (2005?): "Nagel's Atlas", Philosophy and Public Affairs. (As of Nov. 2005 it was forthcoming, probably in the following number.) Response to Nagel.
Nagel, Thomas (2005): "The Problem of Global Justice", Philosophy and Public Affairs 33:2. An influential defense of the Rawlsian view.
Narveson, Jan (2004): "Welfare and Wealth, Poverty and Justice in Today's World", The Journal of Ethics 8:305-348. A defense of a libertarian view of global justice.
This seems to be a fast-developing field, so no doubt new articles have appeared since I did my BA dissertation in this area a year ago.
Posted by: David Ekstrand | August 24, 2007 at 04:23 PM
Journal of Ethics, Volume 9, Numbers 1-2 / March, 2005, is also a special issue devoted to global justice
Posted by: Dale Jamieson | August 25, 2007 at 10:48 AM
An additional publication in this area is my *The Global Justice Reader* that will be published by Blackwell at year's end. The reader contains several selections noted above. I am planning to write a monograph with Blackwell as well that will be self-standing, but will also serve as a companion to the reader. This will (hopefully) appear sometime in 2009.
Posted by: Thom Brooks | August 28, 2007 at 06:39 AM