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Chris Bertram

University of Bristol
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    43
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    9

 More details
  • University of Bristol
    Department of Philosophy
    Retired faculty
Areas of Interest
Social and Political Philosophy
17th/18th Century Philosophy
  • All publications (43)
  •  92
    Liberté et egalité
    The Philosophers' Magazine 28 91-91. 2004.
  •  174
    Coercion of foreigners, territory and compensation
    Justifications for state authority are typically directed towards the good of those subject to that authority. But, because of their territorial nature, states exercise coercion not only towards insiders but also towards non-members. Such coercion can take the form of denying outsiders the right to enter a territory or to settle in it permanently, as well as various restraints on trade and association. When coercion is directed at insiders, it often comes packaged with various claims about distri…Read more
    Justifications for state authority are typically directed towards the good of those subject to that authority. But, because of their territorial nature, states exercise coercion not only towards insiders but also towards non-members. Such coercion can take the form of denying outsiders the right to enter a territory or to settle in it permanently, as well as various restraints on trade and association. When coercion is directed at insiders, it often comes packaged with various claims about distributive justice, including claims to the effect that being subject to coercion entitles citizens to certain distributive guarantees (social minimum, difference principle). This paper asks three questions: can states acquire the moral right to coerce non-citizens (including in the form of a denial of the right to traverse or enter territory)? are outsiders ever morally bound to submit to the commands of states along these lines? does the right coercively to exclude outsiders bring with it any distributive obligations similar to those entailed by the state’s subjection of co-citizens? The possibility that a right to exclude must be coupled with a duty of compensation to those excluded will be canvassed.
    International Justice
  •  29
    The Routledge Guidebook to Rousseau’s The Social Contract
    Routledge. 2018.
    Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  •  226
    Political justification, theoretical complexity, and democratic community
    Ethics 107 (4): 563-583. 1997.
    Political LegitimacyPublic Justification
  • Individualisme et rationalité dans le marxisme analytique
    Actuel Marx 19. 1996.
  •  121
    Cosmopolitanism and inequality
    Res Publica 12 (3): 327-336. 2006.
    Equality, MiscCosmopolitanism
  •  195
    Routledge Philosophy GuideBook to Rousseau and the Social Contract
    Routledge. 2003.
    Rousseau's _Social Contract _is a benchmark in political philosophy and has influenced moral and political thought since its publication. _Rousseau and the Social Contract _introduces and assesses: *Rousseau's life and the background of the _Social Contract _*The ideas and arguments of the _Social Contract _*Rousseau's continuing importance to politics and philosophy _Rousseau and the Social Contract _will be essential reading for all students of philosophy and politics, and anyone coming to Rou…Read more
    Rousseau's _Social Contract _is a benchmark in political philosophy and has influenced moral and political thought since its publication. _Rousseau and the Social Contract _introduces and assesses: *Rousseau's life and the background of the _Social Contract _*The ideas and arguments of the _Social Contract _*Rousseau's continuing importance to politics and philosophy _Rousseau and the Social Contract _will be essential reading for all students of philosophy and politics, and anyone coming to Rousseau for the first time.
    Jean-Jacques RousseauHistory of Political Philosophy
  • MANDLE, J.-What's Left of Liberalism: An Interpretation and Defense of Justice as Fairness
    Philosophical Books 44 (1): 81-81. 2003.
    John RawlsPolitical Liberalism
  •  1
    Exploitation and Future Generations
    In Axel Gosseries & Lukas H. Meyer (eds.), Intergenerational Justice, Oxford University Press. 2009.
    Exploitation
  •  186
    Why Rousseau still matters
    The Philosophers' Magazine 47 (47): 34-42. 2009.
    It would be a mistake to draw the conclusion that Rousseau believes that we should simply disregard what others think and depend entirely and narcissistically on our own evaluation of ourselves and our merits. Once self-love is loose in the world, it is an inescapable feature of our psychology. It is something that it is difficult to tame, but it has to be done.
    Jean-Jacques Rousseau
  •  150
    Principles of distributive justice, counterfactuals and history
    Journal of Political Philosophy 1 (3). 1993.
    Distributive JusticePolitical Ethics
  •  353
    Justice and property: on the institutional thesis concerning property
    The institutional theory of property is that view that property rights are entirely and essentially conventional and are the creatures of states and coercively backed legal systems. In this paper, I argue that, although states and legal systems have a valuable role in defining property rights, the institutional story is not the whole story. Rather, the property rights hat we have reason to recognize as part of justice are partly conventional in character and partly rooted in universal human inter…Read more
    The institutional theory of property is that view that property rights are entirely and essentially conventional and are the creatures of states and coercively backed legal systems. In this paper, I argue that, although states and legal systems have a valuable role in defining property rights, the institutional story is not the whole story. Rather, the property rights hat we have reason to recognize as part of justice are partly conventional in character and partly rooted in universal human interests and dispositions.
    Property in LawOriginal AppropriationGlobal JusticeProperty Rights, MiscLibertarian Critique of Dist…Read more
    Property in LawOriginal AppropriationGlobal JusticeProperty Rights, MiscLibertarian Critique of Distributive Justice
  •  58
    Christopher Bertram
    In Gerald F. Gaus & Fred D'Agostino (eds.), Routledge Companion to Social and Political Philosophy, Routledge. pp. 82. 2012.
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