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73Anything goes? La giustizia procedurale e il disaccordo moralePhilosophy and Public Issues - Filosofia E Questioni Pubbliche 14 69-85. 2010.Questo articolo offre una difesa dell'approccio procedurale alla giustizia rispetto alle critiche che ne evidenziano l'indeterminatezza normativa. A questo fine, l'articolo inizia con la presentazione di un modello di proceduralismo capace di rivelare la specificità di questo approccio alla giustizia rispetto alle alternative orientate agli esiti. La difesa di questo modello di proceduralismo si avvale di due strumenti che, all’interno del pensiero democratico liberale, sono stati invocati spess…Read more
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89TolerationOxford Bibliographies in Philosophy. 2013.The idea of toleration (or tolerance—the terms are mostly used interchangeably) plays a paramount role in liberal theorizing with regard to the normative characterization of the relations between the state and citizens and between majority and minority groups in society. Toleration occurs when an agent A refrains from interfering negatively with an agent B’s practice x or belief y despite A’s opposition to B’s x-ing or y-ing, although A thinks herself to be in the position of interfering. So, th…Read more
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1201Liberal Democratic Institutions and the Damages of Political CorruptionLes ateliers de l'éthique/The Ethics Forum 9 (1): 126-145. 2014.This article contributes to the debate concerning the identification of politically relevant cases of corruption in a democracy by sketching the basic traits of an original liberal theory of institutional corruption. We define this form of corruption as a deviation with respect to the role entrusted to people occupying certain institutional positions, which are crucial for the implementation of public rules, for private gain. In order to illustrate the damages that corrupt behaviour makes to lib…Read more
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159Introduction: Justice, Legitimacy and DiversityCritical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 15 (2): 101-108. 2012.No abstract.
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54The relations between the majority and minorities in a democracy have been standardly viewed as the main subject matter of toleration: the majority should refrain from using its dominant position to interfere with some minorities’ practices or beliefs despite its dislike or disapproval of such practices or beliefs. Can the idea of toleration provide us with the necessary resources to understand and respond to the problems arising out of majority/minorities relations in a democracy? We reply in t…Read more
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153Why Toleration Is Not the Appropriate Response to Dissenting Minorities' ClaimsEuropean Journal of Philosophy 23 (3): 633-651. 2012.For many liberal democrats toleration has become a sort of pet-concept, to which appeal is made in the face of a myriad issues related to the treatment of minorities. Against the inflationary use of toleration, whether understood positively as recognition or negatively as forbearance, I argue that toleration may not provide the conceptual and normative tools to understand and address the claims for accommodation raised by at least one kind of significant minority: democratic dissenting minoritie…Read more
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120Plural Values and Heterogeneous Situations. Considerations on the Scope for a Political Theory of JusticeEuropean Journal of Political Theory 6 (3): 359-375. 2007.This article aims to investigate the way in which a political theory of justice should respond to the endorsement of pluralism. After offering reasons in support of the necessity for such a theory to take pluralism seriously, an argument is put forward for its characterization in minimal and procedural terms. However, taking issue with the straightforward relationship of implication identified by a number of scholars between pluralism and procedural justice, this article contends that a direct r…Read more
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113Just interactions in value conflicts: The Adversary Argumentation PrinciplePolitics, Philosophy and Economics 11 (2): 149-170. 2012.This article discusses a procedural, minimalist approach to justice in terms of fair hearing applicable to value conflicts at impasse in politics. This approach may be summarized in the Adversary Argumentation Principle (AAP): the idea that each side in a conflict should be heard. I engage with Stuart Hampshire’s efforts to justify the AAP and argue that those efforts have failed to provide normatively cogent foundations for it. I suggest deriving such foundations from a basic idea of procedural…Read more
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90A Matter of Respect: On Majority‐Minority Relations in a Liberal DemocracyJournal of Applied Philosophy 30 (3): 239-253. 2013.In this article, we engage critically with the understanding of majority-minority relations in a liberal democracy as relations of toleration. We make two main claims: first, that appeals to toleration are unable to capture the procedural problems concerning the unequal socio-political participation of minorities, and, second, that they do not offer any critical tool to establish what judgements the majority is entitled to consider valid reasons for action with respect to some minority. We sugge…Read more
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82The Legitimacy of the Supranational Regulation of Local Systems of Food Production: A Discussion Whose Time Has ComeJournal of Social Philosophy 46 (4): 418-433. 2015.By reference to the illustrative case of the supranational regulation of local systems of food production, we aim to show the importance of identifying issues of international legitimacy as a discrete component – alongside issues of global distributive justice – of the liberal project of public justification of supranational collective decisions. Therefore, we offer the diagnosis of a problem but do not prescribe the therapy to cure it.
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Department of Political Science and International RelationsProfessor
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Geneva, Geneve, Switzerland
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