• Some central problems in just war theory
    In R. Joseph Hoffmann (ed.), The Just War and Jihad, Prometheus Press. pp. 15. 2006.
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    Nationalism, for and (mainly) against
    In Robert McKim & Jeff McMahan (eds.), The Morality of Nationalism, Oxford University Press. pp. 158-75. 1997.
    To many people, the very idea of nationalism smacks of ethnocentrism or even racism. They suspect that violence, hatred, and distrust of the Other, embodied in a sharply divided world of "us" and "them," always lurk within the nationalist's heart. Recent world events have done nothing to allay these suspicions. Nationalism, on this view, is an evil to be overcome by a cosmopolitan stance that denies the significance of national boundaries. Yet positive values have also been associated with the n…Read more
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    The Moral Equivalence of Action and Omission
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 12 (sup1): 19-36. 1982.
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    Responsibility for Global Poverty
    In Claus Janina Ludger Langbehn Sombetzki Heidbrink (ed.), Handbook of Responsibility, Springer. forthcoming.
    This paper has two aims. The first is to describe several sources of the moral responsibility to remedy or alleviate global poverty—reasons why an agent might have such a responsibility. The second is to consider what sorts of agents bear the responsibilities associated with each source—in particular, whether they are collective agents like states, societies, or corporations, on the one hand, or individual human beings on the other. We often talk about our responsibilities to the poorest people …Read more