Introduction: A Wake-Up Call to Global Conscience
In World Poverty and Human Rights (2002), philosopher Thomas Pogge delivers a powerful moral and political critique of the global order.
This book is not just a work of academic philosophy, it’s a moral indictment of how affluent societies structure and sustain global inequality.
Pogge’s central argument is bold: the current world economic system is complicit in perpetuating poverty, making rich nations morally responsible for the suffering of the poor.
Core Argument: Poverty as a Violation of Human Rights
- Pogge challenges the conventional notion that poverty is a result of bad governance, lack of education, or corruption in developing countries.
- Instead, he asserts that global institutions themselves are unjust, designed in ways that systematically disadvantage the poor.
- He builds on John Rawls’ theory of justice, but expands it to a global scale, arguing that justice cannot be confined within national borders.
- Pogge maintains that affluent states and their citizens have negative duties and obligations not to harm others through unjust…
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