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Kevin Vallier

Bowling Green State University
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  • Bowling Green State University
    Department of Philosophy
    Associate Professor
University of Arizona
Department of Philosophy
PhD, 2011
Homepage
Bowling Green, Ohio, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Public Justification
Social Contract
Political Authority
Political Liberalism
Markets
Trust
17th/18th Century Political Philosophy
19th Century Political Philosophy
Political Theory
4 more
Areas of Interest
Liberalism
Political Liberalism
Moral Contractualism
Deliberative Democracy
Political Libertarianism
Classical Liberalism
Liberalism and Liberty
2 more
  • All publications (62)
  •  81
    Understanding Liberal Democracy: Essays in Political Philosophy, by Nicholas Wolterstorff
    Faith and Philosophy 31 (3): 345-348. 2014.
    Political LegitimacyRepresentative DemocracyConceptions of DemocracyJustification of DemocracyVariet…Read more
    Political LegitimacyRepresentative DemocracyConceptions of DemocracyJustification of DemocracyVarieties of Justice
  •  189
    Public justification versus public deliberation: the case for divorce
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 45 (2): 139-158. 2015.
    I drive a wedge between public deliberation and public justification, concepts tightly associated in public reason liberalism. Properly understood, the ideal of public justification imposes no restraint on citizen deliberation but requires that those who have a substantial impact on the use of coercive power, political officials, advance proposals each person has sufficient reason to accept. I formulate this idea as the Principle of Convergent Restraint and apply it to legislators to illustrate …Read more
    I drive a wedge between public deliberation and public justification, concepts tightly associated in public reason liberalism. Properly understood, the ideal of public justification imposes no restraint on citizen deliberation but requires that those who have a substantial impact on the use of coercive power, political officials, advance proposals each person has sufficient reason to accept. I formulate this idea as the Principle of Convergent Restraint and apply it to legislators to illustrate the general reorientation I propose for the public reason project
    Public JustificationDeliberative DemocracyJustification of Democracy
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