Introduction, Diana Tietjens Meyers Part 1: Thinking through the Meanings of Poverty 1. Surviving Poverty, Claudia Card 2. Poverty Knowledge, Coercion, and Social Rights: A Discourse Ethical Contribution to Social Epistemology, David Ingram 3. Rethinking Coercion for a World of Poverty and Transnational Migration, Diana Tietjens Meyers Part 2: Ethical Responses to Poverty 4. Responsibility for Violations of the Human Right to Subsistence, Elizabeth Ashford 5. Global Poverty, Decent Work, and Remedial Responsibilities: What the Developed World Owes to the Developing World and Why, Gillian Brock 6. Trafficking in Human Beings: Partial Compliance Theory, Enforcement Failure, and Obligations to Victims, Leslie P. Francis and John Francis 7. "Are My Hands Clean?" Responsibility for Global Gender Disparities, Alison Jaggar Part 3: Promoting Development and Ensuring Agency 8. Agency and Intervention: How (Not) to Fight Global Poverty, Ann Cudd 9. Empowerment Through Self-Subordination?: Microcredit and Women's Agency, Serene J. Khader 10. Paradoxes of Development: Rethinking the Right to Development, Amy Allen Part 4: Transnational Transactions and Human Rights 11. Poverty, Voluntariness, and Consent to Participate in Research, Alan Wertheimer 12. Children's Rights, Parental Agency and the Case for Non-coercive Responses to Care Drain, Anca Gheus 13. Human Rights and Global Wrongs: The Role of Human Rights Discourse in Responses to Trafficking, John Christman Index
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