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107More on potentiality and possibilia: A response to stoneJournal of Social Philosophy 32 (2). 2001.
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833The Ethics of International Sanctions: The Case of YugoslaviaFletcher Forum of World Affairs 107-119. 2000.Sanctions such as those applied by the United Nations against Yugoslavia, or rather the actions of implementing and maintaining them, at the very least implicitly purport to have moral justification. While the rhetoric used to justify sanctions is clearly moralistic, even sanctions themselves, as worded, often include phrases indicating moral implication. On May 30, 1992, United Nation Security Council Resolution 757 imposed a universal, binding blockage on all trade and all scientific, cultural…Read more
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88Transitional Justice and “Genocide”: Practical Ethics for Genocide NarrativesThe Journal of Ethics 18 (1): 23-46. 2014.In the wake of the Cold War a characteristic style of genocide narratives emerged in the West. For the most part, philosophers did not pay attention to this development even though they are uniquely qualified to address arguments and conceptual issues discussed in this burgeoning genocide genre. While ostensibly a response to a specific recent article belonging to the genre, this essay offers an outline of an ethics of genocide narratives in the form of four lessons on how not to write about gen…Read more
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129GenocidalismThe Journal of Ethics 8 (3): 251-297. 2004.This is an attempt to develop a more complete understanding of ``genocidalism of commission,'' or the genocidal use of ``genocide,'' defined stipulatively as ``the energetic attributions of ``genocide'' in less than clear cases without considering available and convincing opposing evidence and argumentation.'' Genocidalism is a widespread phenomenon regarding the discourse on international affairs in the advanced, liberal societies of the West, embedding a ``normative divide'' between the ways o…Read more
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982Genocide and Human Rights: A Philosophical Guide - Edited by John K. Roth (review)Philosophical Books 48 (1): 94-96. 2007.Having followed the literature on genocide since the beginning of 1990s I have been often struck that academic writing on genocide is very much like non-professional pursuits in youth sports: anything is considered 'a good try'. The French have a good phrase for what I mean here: n'importe quoi. Works exhibiting no sound methodology, replete with irrational claims without factual basis and beliefs about foreigners adopted on faith limited only by a 'the worse the better' criterion of plausibilit…Read more
University of California, Santa Barbara
Department of Philosophy, University of California, Santa Barbara
PhD, 1991
Portland, Oregon, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Normative Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |