•  7
    Poverty and global distributive justice
    In Duncan Bell (ed.), Ethics and World Politics, Oxford University Press. pp. 256--73. 2010.
  •  3163
    Colonialism, Reparations and Global Justice
    In 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
  •  147
    Global Justice and Global Relations
    Social 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
  •  4022
    A Defense of Luck Egalitarianism
    Journal of Philosophy 105 (11): 665-690. 2008.
  •  116
    In 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
  •  1229
    The Boundary of Justice and The Justice of Boundaries
    Canadian 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
  •  69
    Nationalism and Cosmopolitanism
    In Garrett Wallace Brown & David Held (eds.), The Cosmopolitanism Reader, Polity. pp. 176. 2010.
  •  199
    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.
  •  30
    Equality and special concern
    In Colin Murray Macleod (ed.), Justice and equality, University of Calgary Press. pp. 73-98. 2010.