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92All Rights Are AffirmativeRadical Philosophy Review 4 (1-2): 95-101. 2001.Popular images of rights almost always emphasize their protective qualities. But who is really protected? In this paper it is argued that contemporary rights talk, because of faulty underlying assumptions, systematically favors prejudice and big property interests. Further, once the mistaken assumptions are surrendered, and it is realized that all rights are affirmative, a less systematically misleading debate can be created within the realm of rights discourse.
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Nussbaum's Capabilities Approach: Political Criticism and the Burden of ProofInternational Journal of Politics and Ethics 1 (1): 71-86. 2001.
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427Seeing Ecology and Seeing as Ecology: On Brereton's Hollywood Utopia and the Anderson's Moving Image TheoryFilm-Philosophy 11 (1): 61-69. 2007.Joseph D. Anderson & Barbara Fisher Anderson Moving Image Theory: Ecological ConsiderationsCarbondale: Southern Illinois University Press.ISBN 0 8093 2599 3253pp.Pat Brereton Hollywood Utopia: Ecology in Contemporary American CinemaBristol: Intellect.ISBN 1 84150117 4270pp.
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94Law as a Democratic Means: Deweyan Jurisprudence and Democratic ExperimentalismContemporary Pragmatism 9 (2): 241-254. 2012.
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150Democracy and Law: Situating Law within John Dewey's Democratic VisionEtica & Politica 12 (1): 256-280. 2010.In this paper I argue that John Dewey developed a philosophy of law that follows directly from his conception of democracy. Indeed, under Dewey’s theory an understanding of law can only follow from an accurate understanding of the social and political context within which it functions. This has important implications for the form law takes within democ- ratic society. The paper will explore these implications through a comparison of Dewey’s claims with those of Richard Posner and Ronald Dworkin;…Read more
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