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1185What Second-Best Scenarios Reveal about Ideals of Global JusticeIn Thom Brooks (ed.) https://philpapers.org/rec/BROTOH-3, Oxford University Press. 2020.While there need be no conflict in theory between addressing global inequality (inequalities between people worldwide) and addressing domestic inequality (inequalities between people within a political community), there may be instances in which the feasible mechanism for reducing global inequality risks aggravating domestic inequality. The burgeoning literature on global justice has tended to overlook this type of scenario, and theorists espousing global egalitarianism have consequently not eng…Read more
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2096Political Ideals and the Feasibility FrontierEconomics and Philosophy 31 (3): 447-477. 2015.Recent methodological debates regarding the place of feasibility considerations in normative political theory are hindered for want of a rigorous model of the feasibility frontier. To address this shortfall, I present an analysis of feasibility that generalizes the economic concept of a production possibility frontier and then develop a rigorous model of the feasibility frontier using the familiar possible worlds technology. I then show that this model has significant methodological implications…Read more
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736Estlund has replied to my "Motivational Demands on the Limits of Justice". This short note is my rejoinder.
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1636Cosmopolitanism and Competition: Probing the Limits of Egalitarian JusticeEconomics and Philosophy 33 (1): 91-124. 2017.This paper develops a novel competition criterion for evaluating institutional schemes. Roughly, this criterion says that one institutional scheme is normatively superior to another to the extent that the former would engender more widespread political competition than the latter. I show that this criterion should be endorsed by both global egalitarians and their statist rivals, as it follows from their common commitment to the moral equality of all persons. I illustrate the normative import of …Read more
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1496Demands of Justice, Feasible Alternatives, and the Need for Causal AnalysisEthical Theory and Moral Practice 16 (2): 325-338. 2013.Many political philosophers hold the Feasible Alternatives Principle (FAP): justice demands that we implement some reform of international institutions P only if P is feasible and P improves upon the status quo from the standpoint of justice. The FAP implies that any argument for a moral requirement to implement P must incorporate claims whose content pertains to the causal processes that explain the current state of affairs. Yet, philosophers routinely neglect the need to attend to actual causa…Read more
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University of California, San DiegoDepartment of Political Science
Department of PhilosophyAssociate Professor
La Jolla, San Diego, California, United States of America
Areas of Interest
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