• On Toleration (review)
    Radical Philosophy 90. 1998.
  •  134
    Children: Rights and Childhood (3rd ed.)
    Routledge. 2014.
    Children: Rights and Childhood is widely regarded as the first book to offer a detailed philosophical examination of children’s rights. David Archard provides a clear and accessible introduction to a topic that has assumed increasing relevance since the book’s first publication. The third edition has been fully revised and updated throughout with a new chapter providing an in-depth analysis of the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (UNCRC) and Part 2 has been restructured to mov…Read more
  •  197
    'Selling Yourself:Titmuss's Argument Against a Market in Blood (review)
    The Journal of Ethics 6 (1): 87-102. 2002.
    This article defends Richard Titmuss''s argument, and PeterSinger''s sympathetic support for it, against orthodoxphilosophical criticism. The article specifies thesense in which a market in blood is ``dehumanising'''' ashaving to do with a loss of ``imagined community'''' orsocial ``integration'''', and not with a loss of valued or``deeper'''' liberty. It separates two ``domino arguments''''– the ``contamination of meaning'''' argument and the``erosion of motivation'''' argument which support, i…Read more
  •  226
    How Should We Teach Sex?
    Journal of Philosophy of Education 321 (3): 437-450. 1998.
    In the face of differences about how sex should be taught to young persons, and consistent with a liberal principle of neutrality, educationalists can adopt one of two strategies. The ‘retreat to basics’ consists in teaching only a basic agreed code of sexual conduct, or a set of agreed principles of sexual morality. The ‘conjunctive–disjunctive’ strategy consists in teaching the facts of sexual activity together with the various possible evaluations of these facts. Both strategies are beset wit…Read more
  • News
    Radical Philosophy 41 43. 1985.
  •  38
    The obligations and responsibilities of parenthood
    In David Archard & David Benatar (eds.), Procreation and parenthood: the ethics of bearing and rearing children, Oxford University Press. pp. 103-127. 2010.
    The chapter distinguishes between the parental obligation to ensure that the child has a parent and the responsibilities of acting as a parent. It argues that a causal theory of parental obligation—that those who cause children to exist thereby incur an obligation to ensure that they are adequately cared for—can be defended independently of a theory of parental rights, and has much to commend it. Nevertheless the causal theory must meet the difficulties of supplying a non‐arbitrary and non‐quest…Read more
  •  66
    Apply within
    The Philosophers' Magazine 39 (39): 50-52. 2007.
  •  41
    Review of Lainie Friedman Ross, Children in Medical Research: Access Versus Protection (review)
    Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews 2006 (9). 2006.
  •  157
    For our own good
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 72 (3): 283-293. 1994.