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67Can parity of self-esteem serve as the basis of the principle of linguistic territoriality?Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 18 (2): 199-211. 2015.
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88The graying of Berlin (review)Critical Review: A Journal of Politics and Society 11 (4): 481-501. 1997.In Isaiah Berlin, John Gray interprets Berlin as having made value pluralism the basis of an anti‐rationalist, “agonistic” liberalism. Gray argues that Berlin's value pluralism actually stands in tension with his liberalism, and that a whole‐hearted affirmation of value pluralism should have led him to reject the claim that liberal institutions are morally superior. But Berlin's pluralism is more moderate than that ascribed to him by Gray, in that it does not allow for diminishing the value of l…Read more
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115Just Talk?Dialogue 37 (1): 107-. 1998.Mark Kingwell’s A Civil Tongue is a particularly striking example of this recent trend. Kingwell argues that, for diverse societies, justice reduces to vigorous public debate governed by the conversational virtue of civility, or politeness. According to Kingwell, “Whatever passes through a set of conversational constraints can be expected to be the valid norms or principles of justice”.
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8G.A. Cohen, If You're An Egalitarian, How Come You're So Rich? (review)Philosophy in Review 20 405-407. 2000.
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3The Antinomy of Language RightsIn Will Kymlicka & Alan Patten (eds.), Language Rights and Political Theory, Oxford University Press. 2003.
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95Making Sense of MillDialogue 35 (4): 791-804. 1996.Wendy Donner'sThe Liberal Self: John Stuart Mill's Moral and Political Philosophyis an important and thought-provoking addition to the growing body of literature seeking to rescue Mill's practical philosophy from the rather lowly place it occupied in the estimation of many philosophers earlier this century, and to present him as a philosopher whose views form a coherent, systematic whole that can still contribute significantly to numerous moral and political debates. The book proposes an interpr…Read more
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70Integrating Intermediate Goods to Theories of Distributive Justice: The Importance of PlatformsRes Publica 21 (2): 171-183. 2015.There is an underappreciated disconnect between the ultimate values that lie at the heart of contemporary theories of distributive justice, and the practice of state institutions. State institutions deliver “intermediate goods” – goods such as health-care, education, housing, transportation, and the like – that are instrumental to a society being distributively just, but that do not in an of themselves constitute criteria of justice. Researchers who have emphasized the “social determinants of he…Read more
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74The Justification of Political LiberalismPacific Philosophical Quarterly 75 (3-4): 165-185. 1994.I outline Rawls's theory of justification, highlighting its philosophical and pragmatic conditions. I argue that the theory has remained essentially unchanged since his earliest methodological writings, and that his recent writings have sought to show how "justice as fairness" can satisfy these conditions, given Rawls's new construal of the "fact of pluralism" which theories of justice designed for modern Western liberal democracies must address. I argue that neither Rawls's revised conception o…Read more
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76Perfectionism Versus Neutrality in Public Health: The Case of Advanced Maternal AgeAmerican Journal of Bioethics 15 (11): 49-50. 2015.
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83Libéraux et communautariensDialogue 37 (4): 844-846. 1998.Le débat entre libéraux et communautariens a fait coulé des fleuves d’encre depuis le début des années 1980 dans le domaine de la philosophie politique d’expression anglaise. Le coup d’envoi de ce débat fut sans doute la Théorie de la justice de John Rawls, publiée en 1971. Le livre suscita de la part des auteurs communautariens une vive réaction, dont les moments les plus forts furent probablement Liberalism and the Limits of Justice de Michael Sandel, Spheres of Justice de Michael Walzer, et A…Read more
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50Global justice, global institutions (edited book)University of Calgary Press. 2007.Defining the principles of justice that ought to govern the global economic and political sphere is one of the most urgent tasks that contemporary political philosophers face. But they must also contribute to working through the institutional implications of these principles. How might principles of global justice be realized? Must the institutions that aim to implement them be transnational, or can global justice be attained within the context of the state system? Can institutions of democratic…Read more
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97Bernard Williams, L'éthique et les limites de la philosophie, traduit de l'anglais par Marie-Anne Lescourret, Paris, Gallimard, 1990.Bernard Williams, L'éthique et les limites de la philosophie, traduit de l'anglais par Marie-Anne Lescourret, Paris, Gallimard, 1990 (review)Philosophiques 20 (1): 232-235. 1993.
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122Is there a Moral Case for Nationalism?Journal of Applied Philosophy 13 (1): 87-100. 1996.ABSTRACT Recent writings by philosophers such as David Miller and Yael Tamir have undertaken to provide nationalism with a normative foundation, a task which has been all but ignored by post‐War English‐language political philosophy. I identify and criticise three lines of argument which have been deployed in their writings. First, it is argued by Miller that the universalism and abstraction of rationalist moral theories have made them suspicious of ‘particularisms’ such as nationalism, but that…Read more
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2Toward a Proceduralist Theory of SecessionCanadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 13 (2): 251-262. 2000.Substantive theorists of secession face a problem explaining why the international community ought on their view to withhold recognition from secessions which involve a loss in terms of the substantive criteria they privilege; this is so because the normal electoral politics giving rise to such a loss should not in their opinion meet with any adverse international reaction. The substantive theory of David Miller uses criteria for the legitimacy of secessions which give rise to strangely amoral c…Read more
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130Motivating the global DemosMetaphilosophy 40 (1): 92-108. 2009.Abstract: Debates about the possibility of global democracy and justice are plagued by a fallacious assumption made by all parties. That assumption is that there is a "naturalness" to relations among fellow nationals to which a global demos could never aspire. In fact, nation builders employed a great many tools that mobilized the psychological and moral susceptibilities of individuals in order to create a sense of solidarity out of initially heterogeneous elements. Two such tools are described …Read more
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61Equal Recognition: The Moral Foundations of Minority Rights, Alan Patten , 344 pp., $45 cloth $29.95 paperEthics and International Affairs 30 (2): 278-281. 2016.
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227A neutral conception of reasonableness?Episteme 3 (3): 234-247. 2006.Much liberal theorizing of the past twenty years has been built around a conception of neutrality and an accompanying virtue of reasonableness according to which citizens ought to be able to view public policy debates from a perspective detached from their comprehensive conceptions of the good. The view of “justifi catory neutrality” that emerges from this view is discussed and rejected as embodying controversial views about the relationship of individuals to their conceptions of the good. It is…Read more