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Elizabeth Brake

Rice University
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    34
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 More details
  • Rice University
    Department of Philosophy
    Associate Professor
University of St. Andrews
PhD, 1999
Homepage
Houston, Texas, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
Applied Ethics
Social and Political Philosophy
Philosophy of Gender, Race, and Sexuality
Areas of Interest
Aesthetics
Normative Ethics
European Philosophy
  • All publications (34)
  •  96
    After Marriage: Rethinking Marital Relationships (edited book)
    Oxford University Press USA. 2016.
    In this collection, liberal and feminist philosophers debate whether marriage reform ought to stop with same-sex marriage. Some authors argue for abolishing marriage or for new legal forms such as polygamy or temporary marriage. Others argue that the liberal values justifying same-sex marriage do not entail further reform.
    Feminism: The FamilyFeminist Political PhilosophyGay MarriagePolitical LiberalismFeminism: Marriage …Read more
    Feminism: The FamilyFeminist Political PhilosophyGay MarriagePolitical LiberalismFeminism: Marriage and Civil Unions
  •  15
    Willing parents: A voluntarist account of parental role obligations
    In David Archard & David Benatar (eds.), Procreation and parenthood: the ethics of bearing and rearing children, Oxford University Press. pp. 151--77. 2010.
    Much of the bioethical literature on parenthood does not address a fact about parenthood which deserves more attention: parental rights and obligations are attached to socially constructed institutional roles. Both the content of these roles, and the way in which they determine who a child’s parents will be, issue from social and legal institutions of parenthood, and this makes a difference to accounts of the moral basis of parenthood. I will argue that this poses a problem for the causal accoun…Read more
    Much of the bioethical literature on parenthood does not address a fact about parenthood which deserves more attention: parental rights and obligations are attached to socially constructed institutional roles. Both the content of these roles, and the way in which they determine who a child’s parents will be, issue from social and legal institutions of parenthood, and this makes a difference to accounts of the moral basis of parenthood. I will argue that this poses a problem for the causal account of parenthood: the variability of parental obligations, and their assignment, underscores the problems the causal account has with defining the relevant notion of cause and with fixing procreative costs. If institutional role obligations arise only through voluntary undertakings, then understanding moral parenthood as an institutional role makes the voluntarist account of parenthood more attractive. However, I must address two questions: whether such role obligations can arise non-voluntarily, and whether the voluntarist account can deal with common cases of parenthood.
    Parental RightsFeminism: The FamilyFeminism: ReproductionParental DutiesFamily Ethics, Misc
  •  93
    Procreation and Projects
    The Philosophers' Magazine 75 89-94. 2016.
    A short essay for a general readership on the morality of procreation.
    Morality of Procreation
  •  1
    Jeffrey A. Gauthier, Hegel and Feminist Social Criticism (review)
    Philosophy in Review 18 (6): 421-422. 1998.
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