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192Impure Procedural Justice and the Management of Conflicts about ValuesPolish Journal of Philosophy 2 (1): 5-22. 2008.This paper aims to outline the essential structural traits that a procedural theory of justice for the management of conflicts about values should display in order to combine open-endedness and cogency. To this purpose, it offers an investigation into the characteristics of procedural justice through a critical assessment of John Rawls‟s taxonomy of proceduralism, in terms of perfect, imperfect and pure procedural justice. Given the concessions the two former kinds of proceduralism make to subst…Read more
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199Beyond Legitimacy. Can Proceduralism Say Anything Relevant About Justice?Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 15 (2): 183-200. 2012.Whilst legitimacy is often thought to concern the processes through which coercive decisions are made in society, justice has been standardly viewed as a ‘substantial’ matter concerning the moral justification of the terms of social cooperation. Accordingly, theorization about procedures may seem appropriate for the former but not for the latter. To defend proceduralism as a relevant approach to justice, I distinguish three questions: (1) Who is entitled to exercise coercive power? (2) On what t…Read more
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139Seeking Mutual Understanding. A Discourse Theoretical Analysis of the WTO Dispute Settlement SystemWorld Trade Review 9 (3): 457-485. 2010.The WTO Dispute Settlement System (DSS) has been the object of many studies in politics, law, and economics focusing on institutional design problems. This paper contributes to such studies by accounting for the argumentative nature and sophisticated features of the DSS through a philosophical analysis of the procedures through which it is articulated. Jürgen Habermas's discourse theory is used as a hermeneutic device to disentangle the types of ‘orientations’ (compromise, consensus, and mutual …Read more
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148Justice, Legitimacy, and Diversity: Political Authority Between Realism and Moralism (edited book)Routledge. 2012.Most contemporary political philosophers take justice—rather than legitimacy—to be the fundamental virtue of political institutions vis-à-vis the challenges of ethical diversity. Justice-driven theorists are primarily concerned with finding mutually acceptable terms to arbitrate the claims of conflicting individuals and groups. Legitimacy-driven theorists, instead, focus on the conditions under which those exercising political authority on an ethically heterogeneous polity are entitled to do so.…Read more
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61How Should a Theory of Justice Respond to Value Conflicts? Some Meta-Theoretical ReflectionsRivista di Filosofia 101 (1): 81-98. 2010.L’oggetto di questo studio è il tipo di contributo che le teorizzazioni filosofiche sulla giustizia possono dare in risposta ai conflitti di valori in politica, perseguendo la risoluzione o la gestione di questi ultimi, e le implicazioni che la scelta di una di queste strade può avere sulla struttura della teoria stessa.
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77Values, Diversity and the Justification of EU InstitutionsPolitical Studies 57 (4): 828-845. 2009.Liberal theories of justice typically claim that political institutions should be justifiable to those who live under them – whatever their values. The more such values diverge, the greater the challenge of justifiability. Diversity of this kind becomes especially pronounced when the institutions in question are supra-national. Focusing on the case of the European Union, this paper aims to address a basic question: what kinds of value should inform the justification of political institutions fac…Read more
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PluralismIn Antonella Besussi (ed.), A Companion to Political Philosophy: Methods, Tools, Topics, Ashgate. 2012.
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80Introduction The Political Philosophy of Food Policies, Part I: Justice, Legitimacy, and RightsJournal of Social Philosophy 46 (4): 398-401. 2015.
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56This paper addresses the problem of the foundation of a procedural and minimalist approach to justice in terms of fair hearing. This approach may be summarised in the ‘principle of adversary argument’ (the idea that each side in a conflict should be heard). In particular, I intend to test whether this principle may provide the bases for a conception of justice applicable to conflicts of value in politics. More precisely, the considerations I shall offer aim to answer the following question: ‘How…Read more
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194Self-legislation, Respect and the Reconciliation of Minority ClaimsJournal of Applied Philosophy 28 (1): 14-28. 2010.It is a widely supported claim that liberal democratic institutions should treat citizens with equal respect. I neither dispute nor champion this claim, but investigate how it could be fulfilled. I do this by asking, as a sort of litmus test, how liberal democratic institutions should treat with respect citizens holding minority convictions, and thereby dissenting from a deliberative output. The first step of my argument consists in clarifying the sense in which liberal democracies have a primar…Read more
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Department of Political Science and International RelationsProfessor
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Geneva, Geneve, Switzerland
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