•  159
    Multiple citizenship: normative ideals and institutional challenges
    Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 15 (3): 279-302. 2012.
    Institutional suggestions for how to rethink democracy in response to changing state responsibilities and capabilities have been numerous and often mutually incompatible. This suggests that conceptual unclarity still reigns concerning how the normative ideal of democracy as collective self-determination, i.e. ?rule by the people?, might best be brought to bear in a transnational and global context. The aim in this paper is twofold. First, it analyses some consequences of the tendency to smudge t…Read more
  •  87
    Why Democracy Cannot Be Grounded in Epistemic Principles
    Social Theory and Practice 42 (3): 449-473. 2016.
    In recent years, philosophers influenced by Peirce's pragmatism have contributed to the democracy debate by offering not simply a justification of democracy that relies on epistemic as well as moral presumptions, but a justification on purely epistemic grounds, that is, without recourse to any moral values or principles. In a nutshell, this pragmatist epistemic argument takes as its starting-point a few fundamental epistemic principles we cannot reasonably deny, and goes on to claim that a numbe…Read more
  • In Search for Democratic Agency in Deliberative Governance
    European Journal of International Relations 19 (4). 2013.
  •  33
    Territories of Citizenship
    Palgrave-Macmillan. 2012.
    A comprehensive exploration of theories of citizenship and inclusiveness in an age of globalization. The authors analyze democracy and the political community in a transnational context, using new critical, conceptual and normative perspectives on the borders, territories and political agents of the state.
  •  171
  •  92
    How practices do not matter
    Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy (1). 2019.
  •  201
    Why Political Realists Should Not Be Afraid of Moral Values
    Journal of Philosophical Research 40 459-464. 2015.
    In a previous article, we unpacked the so-called “ethics first premise”—the idea that ethics is “prior” to politics when theorizing political legitimacy— that is denied by political realists. We defended a “justificatory” reading of this premise, according to which political justification is irreducibly moral in the sense that moral values are among the values that ground political legitimacy. We called this the “necessity thesis.” In this paper we respond to two challenges that Robert Jubb and …Read more
  • On Goodhart's Global Democracy: A Critique
    Ethics and International Affairs 22 (4). 2008.
    In this critique of Michael Goodhart's "Human Rights and Global Democracy," Eva Erman argues that Goodhart has reconceptualized democracy and therefore does not offer a better understanding of the relationship between human rights and global democracy
  •  85
    What not to expect from the pragmatic turn in political theory
    European Journal of Political Theory (2): 1474885114537635. 2014.
    The central ideas coming out of the so-called pragmatic turn in philosophy have set in motion what may be described as a pragmatic turn in normative political theory. It has become commonplace among political theorists to draw on theories of language and meaning in theorising democracy, pluralism, justice, etc. The aim of this paper is to explore attempts by political theorists to use theories of language and meaning for such normative purposes. Focusing on Wittgenstein's account, it is argued t…Read more
  •  203
    The question of what role social and political practices should play in the justification of normative principles has received renewed attention in post-millennium political philosophy. Several current debates express dissatisfaction with the methodology adopted in mainstream political theory, taking the form of a criticism of so-called ‘ideal theory’ from ‘non-ideal’ theory, of ‘practice-independent’ theory from ‘practice-dependent’ theory, and of ‘political moralism’ from ‘political realism’. …Read more
  •  4
    This paper analyzes agency in Pettit’s republican conception of freedom. By understanding freedom intersubjectively in terms of agency, Pettit makes an important contribution to the contemporary debate on negative liberty. At the same time, some of the presumptions about agency are problematic. The paper defends the thesis that Pettit is not able to provide the sufficient conditions for freedom as non-domination that he sets out to do. In order to show why this is the case and how we can address…Read more
  •  80
    The Right to Justification : Elements of a Constructivist Theory of Justice
  •  24
    Editorial
    Ethics and Global Politics 1 (1-2). 2008.
  •  62
    This volume explores the relationship between human rights and democracy within both the theoretical and empirical field. It is an innovative study that offers tools for democratizing existing global political institutions.
  •  88
    One world, many worlds?
    with Sofia Näsström
    Ethics and Global Politics 2 (4). 2009.