•  105
    Liberal Foreign Policy and the Ideal of Fair Social Cooperation
    Journal of Social Philosophy 44 (3): 291-308. 2013.
    In The Law of Peoples Rawls claims that liberal well-ordered societies (LWOSs) should regard certain non-liberal societies, decent hierarchical societies (DHSs), as equal members of a just international order, a ‘Society of Peoples.’ Rawls maintains, however, that while the ‘basic structures’ (the main political and economic institutions) of LWOSs are fair systems of social cooperation, the basic structures of DHSs are only ‘decent’ systems of social cooperation. I explain why the basic structur…Read more
  •  52
    Review of James R. Otteson, Actual Ethics (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2007 (8). 2007.
  •  173
    Civic respect, political liberalism, and non-liberal societies
    Politics, Philosophy and Economics 4 (3): 275-299. 2005.
    One prominent criticism of John Rawls’s The Law of Peoples is that it treats certain non-liberal societies, what Rawls calls ‘decent hierarchical societies’, as equal participants in a just international system. Rawls claims that these non-liberal societies should be respected as equals by liberal democratic societies, even though they do not grant their citizens the basic rights of democratic citizenship. This is presented by Rawls as a consequence of liberalism’s commitment to the principle of…Read more
  •  147
    Political Liberalism and Citizenship Education
    Philosophy Compass 8 (9): 781-797. 2013.
    John Rawls claims that the kind of citizenship education required by political liberalism demands ‘far less’ than that required by comprehensive liberalism. Many educational and political theorists who have explored the implications of political liberalism for education policy have disputed Rawls's claim. Writing from a comprehensive liberal perspective, Amy Gutmann contends that the justificatory differences between political and comprehensive liberalism generally have no practical significance…Read more