Riordans Global Ethics and Global Common Goods is exceptional. Richly theoretical debates about distinctions between liberal notions and common good notions run alongside more practically focused debate about how to find agreement in the quest for international cooperation. This much-needed book draws upon an ancient tradition to generate an innovative trajectory in global ethics today. * Esther D. Reed, University of Exeter, UK * The expression the common good is often uttered but rarely analysed; indeed it is often little more than a political cliché. In this timely study Patrick Riordan engages in analysis drawing upon classical sources and contemporary arguments and provides a clear and very useful treatment of the concept, revealing its richness and applicability in relation to global moral and social philosophy. * John Haldane, FRSE, Professor of Philosophy and Director of the Centre for Ethics, Philosophy and Public Affairs, University of St Andrews, UK * The importance of the book's topic cannot be overestimated and the author is clearly familiar with the literature ... [ It] provides a good introduction, not only to the topic itself but also to several relevant authors. * Ethical Perspectives * Natural law ethics begins from a variety of basic goods. It asks what are the goods that constitute that variety, and how individuals can adequately respond to these goods. What is the corresponding political philosophy? What might a natural law global ethics look like? What has the natural law approach to say about the environment, the economy, international law, human rights? Patrick Riordans philosophical exploration of these questions is careful, learned, ambitious, and ground-breaking. And it could not be more timely. * Timothy Chappell, Professor of Philosophy, Faculty of Arts, The Open University, UK *