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143Cosmopolitan Impartiality and Patriotic PartialityCanadian Journal of Philosophy 35 (sup1): 165-192. 2005.Cosmopolitanism, as a moral idea, holds that individuals are the ultimate units of moral worth and are entitled to equal consideration, regardless of contingencies such as citizenship or nationality. In one common interpretation, cosmopolitan justice not only regards individuals as the basic subjects of moral concern, but it also requires distributive principles to transcend national affiliations and to apply equally to all persons of the world. As Simon Caney puts it, “persons’ entitlements sho…Read more
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2The demands of justice and national allegiancesIn Gillian Brock & Harry Brighouse (eds.), The Political Philosophy of Cosmopolitanism, Cambridge University Press. 2005.
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1806The Duty to ProtectIn Terry Nardin & Melissa S. Williams (eds.), Humanitarian Intervention: Nomos Xlvii, New York University Press. 2005.Debates on humanitarian intervention have focused on the permissibility question. In this paper, I ask whether intervention can be a moral duty, and if it is a moral duty, how this duty is to be distributed and assigned. With respect to the first question, I contemplate whether an intervention that has met the "permissibility" condition is also for this reason necessary and obligatory. If so, the gap between permission and obligation closes in the case of humanitarian intervention. On the secon…Read more
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17Cosmopolitanism and PatriotismIn Will Kymlicka & Kathryn Walker (eds.), Rooted Cosmopolitanism: Canada and the World, University of British Columbia Press. 2012.
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1415Kantian Ethics and Global JusticeSocial Theory and Practice 23 (1): 53-73. 1997.Kant divides moral duties into duties of virtue and duties of justice. Duties of virtue are imperfect duties, the fulfillment of which is left to agent discretion and so cannot be externally demanded of one. Duties of justice, while perfect, seem to be restricted to negative duties (of nondeception and noncoercion). It may seem then that Kant's moral philosophy cannot meet the demands of global justice. I argue, however, that Kantian justice when applied to the social and historical realities of…Read more
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2324Global Democracy: International, Not CosmopolitanIn Deen Chatterjee (ed.), Democracy in a Global World, Rowman&littlefield. 2008.
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3Rights, harm, and institutionsIn Alison Jaggar (ed.), Thomas Pogge and His Critics, Polity. 2010.
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1338Luck, Institutions, and Global Distributive JusticeEuropean Journal of Political Theory 10 (3): 394-421. 2011.Luck egalitarianism provides one powerful way of defending global egalitarianism. The basic luck egalitarian idea that persons ought not to be disadvantaged compared to others on account of his or her bad luck seems to extend naturally to the global arena, where random factors such as persons’ place of birth and the natural distribution of the world’s resources do affect differentially their life chances. Yet luck egalitarianism as an ideal, as well as its global application, has come under seve…Read more
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63Justice Between Sites of JusticeLaw and Philosophy 35 (3): 291-311. 2016.Michael Blake argues that states are the primary sites of justice for persons and that the function of international justice is to ensure that states interact with each other in ways that preserve the capacity of each to realize justice for their own members. This paper will argue that justice among states requires more of states than that they preserve and maintain each other's capacity as primary sites of justice. Justice among states will require some justification, as well, of the claims of …Read more
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3David Ingram, Group Rights: Reconciling Equality and Difference (review)Philosophy in Review 20 418-420. 2000.
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7Poverty and global distributive justiceIn Duncan Bell (ed.), Ethics and World Politics, Oxford University Press. pp. 256--73. 2010.
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3163Colonialism, Reparations and Global JusticeIn Jon Miller & Rahul Kumar (eds.), Reparations: interdisciplinary inquiries, Oxford University Press. pp. 280--306. 2007.This chapter examines two basic philosophical challenges for the idea of reparations for past injustices (using colonialism as the focal point). The first challenge is that requiring people today to make reparations for an injustice they themselves did not commit is unfair. The second is that if reparative claims are invoked because of lingering injustices, then recalling the past is in fact normatively redundant if lingering present injustices can be handled by forward-looking principles. In re…Read more
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Liberal equality : what, where, and whyIn Cheryl Misak (ed.), The Oxford handbook of American philosophy, Oxford University Press. 2008.
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147Global Justice and Global RelationsSocial Theory and Practice 36 (3): 499-514. 2010.In Globalizing Justice, Richard Miller offers a novel understanding of the grounds and scope of the demands of global justice. Miller argues that our duties to the global poor should be conceived relationally, that is, as deriving from the very complex and substantial relationships that we, members of rich countries, have with members of poor countries. In this review essay, I ask whether a relational approach to justice is necessary for the kinds of global duties Miller wishes to advance (that …Read more
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116In some discussions on global distributive justice, it is argued that the factthat the state exercises coercive authority over its own citizens explains whythe state has egalitarian distributive obligations to its own but not to otherindividuals in the world at large. Two recent works make the case that the globalorder is indeed coercive in a morally significant way for generating certainglobal distributive obligations. Nicole Hassoun argues that the coercivecharacter of the global order gives r…Read more
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1229The Boundary of Justice and The Justice of BoundariesCanadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 29 (2): 319-344. 2006.Two classes of arguments are often deployed by the anti-global egalitarians against attempts to universalize the demands of distributive equality. One are arguments attempting to show that global egalitarians have misconstrued the reasons for why equality matters domestically, and hence have wrongly extended these reasons to the global arena. These arguments hold that the boundary of distributive justice is effectively coextensive with the boundaries of state. The other are arguments that attemp…Read more
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69Nationalism and CosmopolitanismIn Garrett Wallace Brown & David Held (eds.), The Cosmopolitanism Reader, Polity. pp. 176. 2010.
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199Justice, Institutions, and Luck: The Site, Ground, and Scope of EqualityOxford University Press. 2012.Kok-Chor Tan addresses three key questions in political philosophy: Where does distributive equality matter? Why does it matter? And among whom does it matter? He argues for an institutional site for egalitarian justice, a luck-egalitarian ideal of why equality matters, and a global scope for distributive justice.
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30Equality and special concernIn Colin Murray Macleod (ed.), Justice and equality, University of Calgary Press. pp. 73-98. 2010.
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187Why global justice mattersJournal of Global Ethics 10 (2): 128-134. 2014.Why does global justice as a philosophical inquiry matter? We know that the world is plainly unjust in many ways and we know that something ought to be done about this without, it seems, the need of a theory of global justice. Accordingly, philosophical inquiry into global justice comes across to some as an intellectual luxury that seems disconnected from the real world. I want to suggest, however, that philosophical inquiry into global justice is necessary if we want to address the problems of …Read more
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132Boundary making and equal concernMetaphilosophy 36 (1‐2): 50-67. 2005.Liberal nationalism is a boundary‐making project, and a feature of this boundary‐making enterprise is the belief that the compatriots have a certain priority over strangers. For this reason it is often thought that liberal nationalism cannot be compatible with the demands of global egalitarianism. In this essay, I examine the sense in which liberal nationalism privileges compatriots, and I argue that, properly understood, the idea of partiality for compatriots in the context of liberal nationali…Read more
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200Patriotic ObligationsThe Monist 86 (3): 434-453. 2003.It is commonly believed that people have special obligations to their compatriots that are both distinct from and stronger than the general duties they owe to individuals at large. Thus, it is often thought that these special obligations may legitimately limit what global distributive justice can demand of people, including those from well-off countries. Henceforth by special obligations, I mean specifically special obligations to com- patriots, which I will also call patriotic obligations, or p…Read more
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1035Enforcing Cosmopolitan Justice: the problem of interventionIn Roland Pierik & Wouter Werner (eds.), Cosmopolitanism in Context: Perspectives from International Law and Political Theory, Cambridge University Press. 2010.
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312Liberal nationalism and cosmopolitan justiceEthical Theory and Moral Practice 5 (4): 431-461. 2002.Many liberals have argued that a cosmopolitan perspective on global justice follows from the basic liberal principles of justice. Yet, increasingly, it is also said that intrinsic to liberalism is a doctrine of nationalism. This raises a potential problem for the liberal defense of cosmopolitan justice as it is commonly believed that nationalism and cosmopolitanism are conflicting ideals. If this is correct, there appears to be a serious tension within liberal philosophy itself, between its cosm…Read more
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Normative Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Normative Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |