•  168
    Three Failed Charges against Ideal Theory
    Social Theory and Practice 39 (1): 19-44. 2013.
    An intensified discussion on the role of normative ideals has re-emerged in several debates in political philosophy. What is often referred to as “ideal theory,” represented by liberal egalitarians such as John Rawls, is under attack from those that stress that political philosophy at large should take much more seriously the nonideal circumstances consisting of relations of domination and power under which normative ideals, principles, and ideas are supposed to be applied. While the debate so f…Read more
  •  12
    Political Equality in Transnational Democracy
    with Sofia Näsström
    Palgrave-Macmillan. 2013.
    This book is about the status of political equality under global political conditions. The overall aim is to revitalize the debate on the status of political equality in transnational democracy.
  •  54
    What is wrong with agonistic pluralism?: Reflections on conflict in democratic theory
    Philosophy and Social Criticism 35 (9): 1039-1062. 2009.
    During the last couple of decades, concurrently with an increased awareness of the complexity of ethical conflicts, political theorists have directed attention to how constitutional democracy should cope with a fact of incommensurable doctrines. Poststructuralists such as Chantal Mouffe claim that ethical conflicts are fundamentally irreconcilable, which is indeed a view shared by many liberal theorists. The question of whether ethical conflicts are in principle irreconcilable is an important on…Read more
  •  50
    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
  •  40
    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.
  •  10
    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.
  •  106
  •  31
    How practices do not matter
    Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy (1). 2019.
  •  91
    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