•  39
    Institutional Accountability
    Philosophy Compass 21 (3). 2026.
    Institutional accountability is central to democratic governance, yet philosophical inquiry still lacks a conceptually refined and comprehensive map to appreciate its boundaries and defining features. This article offers such a map from a human‐centered view of institutional action. Institutions are not merely systems of rules and procedures; they are enacted through officeholders' interdependent and relatively discretionary conduct‐in‐role. Accountability, therefore, must be understood not only…Read more
  •  1
    This Editorial to the 20th Anniversary Issue of Ethical Theory and Moral Practice outlines key challenges and opportunities arising from the recent explosion of responsibility studies in different areas. The underlying ambition is to counter the trend of fragmenting the philosophical debate around responsibility by bringing together helpful insights on related dimensions. The discussion is organised around three main themes: (1) Accountability, Attributability, Answerability, Liability; (2) Indi…Read more
  •  18
    Editorial: The Happy Marriage between Theoretical Ambition and Practical Relevance
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 28 (5): 673-676. 2026.
  •  164
    This book discusses political corruption and anticorruption as a matter of a public ethics of office. It shows how political corruption is the Trojan horse that undermines public institutions from within via the interrelated action of the officeholders. Even well-designed institutions may go off track if the officeholders fail to uphold by their conduct a public ethics of office accountability. Most current discussions of political corruption and of why it is wrong have concentrated either on ex…Read more
  •  32
    Democratic failures and the heuristic function of localized principled protest
    with Marta Giunta Martino
    Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy. forthcoming.
    Community-based opposition to large infrastructure projects, such as highways, rail lines, or energy facilities, exemplifies localized forms of protest. The paper clarifies when and how such forms of protest can enhance the democratic decision-making process to the extent that they highlight procedural failures alongside substantive ones. When this happens, these protests perform a heuristic communicative function for democracy and cannot, therefore, be dismissed as hypocritical ‘not in my backy…Read more
  •  57
    Recent years have seen a number of whistleblowers risk their liberty to expose illegal and corrupt behaviour. Some have heralded their bravery; others see them as traitors. Can there be a moral duty to emulate their example and blow the whistle? In this book, leading political philosophers Emanuela Ceva and Michele Bocchiola draw on well-known cases, such as those of Edward Snowden and Chelsea Manning, to probe the difference between permissible and dutiful whistleblowing. They argue that, insof…Read more
  •  18
    In this interview, Emanuela Ceva points to some of the practical and political issues (alongside various conceptual disagreements) associated with toleration. In particular, she stresses the centrality of l’affaire du foulard that galvanized contemporary discussions on toleration and the accommodation of diversity in general. Of particular relevance is her emphasis on the danger that the inflatory use of concepts such as toleration brings. In the final section of this interview, she accentuates …Read more
  •  28
    The Toolkit of Public Ethics
    In Enrico Biale, Federica Liveriero & Roberta Sala (eds.), Public Ethics for Real People: Toleration, Equal Respect, and Democratic Distortions, Springer Nature Switzerland. pp. 3-19. 2024.
    Practical philosophers within the analytic tradition have utilized methods such as conceptual analysis and thought experiments to articulate their theories in a clear and accessible way. However, these methods, while rigorous, have been critiqued as too concerned with abstraction and generalization to address the practical challenges faced by “real people” in specific societal and political contexts. Drawing on the innovative work of Elisabetta Galeotti, I argue for a “normative” turn in the met…Read more
  •  73
    Journal of Social Philosophy, EarlyView.
  •  75
    The public ethics of whistleblowing
    In Edward Hall & Andrew Sabl (eds.), Political Ethics: A Handbook, Princeton University Press. pp. 193-212. 2022.
  •  78
    Institutional operability refers to the normative conditions governing the exercise of power of office that makes an institution work. Because institutional action occurs by the interrelated actions of the officeholders, a focus on institutional operability requires the analysis and assessment of the officeholders’ conduct in their institutional capacity. This article distinguishes two perspectives on operability: ‘outward’ and ‘inward.’ The outward view emphasizes predefined instructions for ef…Read more
  •  71
    The interactive wrong of political corruption: A reply to Warren, Santoro and Fabre
    European Journal of Political Theory 23 (3): 425-432. 2024.
    In this response essay, Ceva and Ferretti reply to their critics and clarify some key aspects of their book. Specifically, the discussion starts by elaborating on the notion of an ethics of office accountability, explaining that the specification of institutional norms of officeholders behaviour is the result of practices of officeholders' interaction (including democratic practices) and reflection. The second theme is the responsibility for political corruption. The authors emphasise the import…Read more
  •  59
    La sfida della corruzione politica all’etica pubblica. Introduzione
    Rivista Italiana di Filosofia Politica 4 5-17. 2023.
    The article presents political corruption as a problem of public ethics of institutions. It first explains the theory of institutional action that underlies the conception of political corruption as a deficit of “office accountability”. Having clarified the officeholders’ duties in their institutional capacity, it portrays political corruption as an “internal enemy” of public institutions. A discussion follows of the normative implications for an approach to anti-corruption based on the officeho…Read more
  •  825
    Framing the Role of Envy in Transitional Justice
    Passion: Journal of the European Philosophical Society for the Study of Emotion 1 (1): 68-84. 2023.
    This article offers a conceptual framework for discussing the role of envy within processes of transitional justice. Transitional justice importantly includes the transformation of intergroup dynamics of interaction in the aftermath of societal conflicts and upheavals. Such transformation aims to realise “interactive” justice in transitional justice by reshaping belief and value systems, and by moulding emotional responses between the involved parties. A nuanced understanding of the emotions at …Read more
  •  79
    The Inherent Tolerance of the Democratic Process
    Journal of Ethics and Social Philosophy 23 (3): 321-342. 2023.
    Recent attempts at making sense of toleration as an ideal of political morality have focused on how liberal democratic institutions generate political arrangements that protect people’s freedom to “live their life as they see fit.” We show how these views rely on a one-dimensional interpretation of the liberal democratic political project. In so doing, they underestimate an important “interactive” dimension. This dimension concerns what it means for liberal democracies to realize toleration as a…Read more
  •  645
    Individual Responsibility under Systemic Corruption: A Coercion-Based View
    Moral Philosophy and Politics 10 (1): 95-117. 2023.
    Should officeholders be held individually responsible for submitting to systemically corrupt institutional practices? We draw a structural analogy between individual action under coercive threat and individual participation in systemic corruption, and we argue that officeholders who submit to corrupt institutional practices are not excused by the existence of a systemic coercive threat. Even when they have good personal reasons to accept the threat, they remain individually morally assessable an…Read more
  •  37
    Editors’-in-Chief Note
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 26 (1): 1-1. 2023.
  •  75
    Scholars and international organizations engaged in institutional reconstruction converge in recognizing political corruption as a cause or a consequence of conflicts. Anticorruption is thus generally considered a centrepiece of institutional reconstruction programmes. A common approach to anticorruption within this context aims primarily to counter the negative political, social, and economic effects of political corruption, or implement legal anticorruption standards and punitive measures. We …Read more
  •  67
    Automating anticorruption?
    Ethics and Information Technology 24 (4): 1-14. 2022.
    The paper explores some normative challenges concerning the integration of Machine Learning (ML) algorithms into anticorruption in public institutions. The challenges emerge from the tensions between an approach treating ML algorithms as allies to an exclusively legalistic conception of anticorruption and an approach seeing them within an institutional ethics of office accountability. We explore two main challenges. One concerns the variable opacity of some ML algorithms, which may affect public…Read more
  •  119
    Theories of whistleblowing
    Philosophy Compass 2020 (15): 2-10. 2019.
    “Whistleblowing” has entered the scholarly and the publicdebate as a way of describing the exposure by the memberof an organization of episodes of corruption, fraud, or generalabuses of power within the organization. We offer acritical survey of the main normative theories ofwhistleblowing in the current debate in political philosophy,with the illustrative aid of one of the epitomic figures of awhistleblower of our time: Edward Snowden. After conceptuallyseparating whistleblowing from other form…Read more
  •  74
    Institutional rules, roles, and the dynamics of public power
    Jurisprudence 13 (3): 443-448. 2022.
    What makes public institutions normatively distinctive, if anything? Is there a sense in which the privatisation of the public function corrupts such distinctiveness? If such a sense is there, what...
  •  175
    Constellations, EarlyView.
  •  94
    The article discusses the resort to whistleblowing as a form of resistance to institutional wrongdoing that comes from within an institution. The resort to whistleblowing can take either an individual or an institutional form. As an individual act of resistance, whistleblowing has often been presented as a last resort against institutional wrongdoing whose justification draws on normative arguments for civil disobedience. The institutional form we present in this article shows a nontrivial sense…Read more
  •  909
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice at 24
    with Lubomira V. Radoilska
    Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 24 (1): 1-3. 2021.
    This Editorial outlines recent developments in the Journal’s scope, mission and review policy. It also illustrates the range of topics addressed on the pages of Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, which is now entering its 24th year.
  •  1
    The challenges of dietary pluralism
    with Chiara Testino and Federico Zuolo
    In Mary Rawlinson & Caleb Ward (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Food Ethics, Routledge. pp. 93--102. 2016.
  •  147
    Failing Institutions, Whistle‐Blowing, and the Role of the News Media
    with Emanuela Ceva and Dorota Mokrosinska
    Journal of Applied Philosophy 3 377-392. 2020.
    The paper discusses the normative grounds for recognizing a watchdog role to the news media as concerns the dissemination of information about an institutional failure menacing a well-ordered society. This is, for example, the case of the news media’s role in the diffusion of whistleblowers’ disclosures. We argue that many popular justifications for the watchdog role of the news media (as a ‘fourth estate’; a trustee of the people’s right to know; expert communicator) fail to ground that role in…Read more
  •  111
    Political corruption is a contested concept. Both terms in the concept are the object of controversies in political theory, and concern what corruption is and how it is a politically relevant phenomenon. Political corruption has been contested across time, space, cultures, and philosophical traditions. Usually, political corruption is assumed to involve an exchange between a private corruptor and a public official who pursues her personal interest by abusing her power of office. While this accou…Read more
  •  116
    This is a support piece to the Philosophy Compass article "Theories of Whistleblowing." It gives indications for some essential bibliography helpful to design a teaching module on the justification of whistleblowing.
  •  1245
    Theories of whistleblowing
    Philosophy Compass 15 (1). 2020.
    Abstract“Whistleblowing” has entered the scholarly and the public debate as a way of describing the exposure by the member of an organization of episodes of corruption, fraud, or general abuses of power within the organization. We offer a critical survey of the main normative theories of whistleblowing in the current debate in political philosophy, with the illustrative aid of one of the epitomic figures of a whistleblower of our time: Edward Snowden. After conceptually separating whistleblowing…Read more