If under stress of circumstance individuals have made any promise to the enemy, they are bound to keep their word even then.
If under stress of circumstance individuals have made any promise to the enemy, they are bound to keep their word even then.
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Andrew DobsonAndrew Dobson is professor of politics at Keele University. Among his books are Citizenship and the Environment (Oxford University Press, 2003), (as co-editor) Political Theory and the Ecological Challenge (Cambridge University Press, 2006) and Green Political Thought (Routledge, new edition, 2007). His website is here. Recent articlesA politics of crisis: low-energy cosmopolitanism The global financial turmoil is opening new fissures in the world's political crust. All the more need to make a cool assessment of the prospects for left and right, say Andrew Dobson & David Hayes. (This article was first published on 22 October 2008) Climate change and the public sphereA reinvigoration of the idea of the public realm is vital to mitigating climate change, says Andrew Dobson. Was Bali a success?The climate-change conference in Bali on 3-14 December 2007 ended in agreement, acclaim - and argument about the details. openDemocracy writers and environmental specialists offer a first draft of history on the Bali deal. A climate of crisis: towards the eco-stateThe worldwide environmental emergencies of late-summer 2007 highlight the need for new political agency, argues Andrew Dobson. A politics of global warming: the social-science resourceWhat kind of politics does climate change need? New understandings of the real drivers of human social behaviour can help provide an answer, says Andrew Dobson |
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