•  27
    Jewish Locations: Traversing Racialized Landscapes (edited book)
    Rowman & Littlefield. 2001.
    This volume brings together essays that reflect on ontological and moral dilemmas regarding Jewish identity and race. The reflections offered here take place in the context of post-Holocaust transformations and pay special attention to the double processes of the deracialization of Jews qua Jews and the recasting of Jews both in reracialized and in other terms. As a result, the essays bring together and create intersections between Jewish studies and critical theories of race and help stretch th…Read more
  •  51
    Value Pluralism, Intuitions, and Reflective Equilibrium
    Philosophical Topics 41 (2): 175-201. 2013.
    A constructivist approach to ethics must include some process—such as Rawls’ (1971) reflective equilibrium—for moving from initial evaluative judgments to those that one can affirm. Walker’s (1998; 2003) feminist version of reflective equilibrium incorporates what she calls “transparency testing” to weed out pernicious, ideologically shaped intuitions. However, in light of empirical work on the plurality of values and on the cognitive processes through which people arrive at moral judgments (i.e…Read more
  •  51
    On (Not) Living the Good Life
    Canadian Journal of Philosophy 32 (sup1): 3-32. 2002.
  •  65
    While communities engaged in liberatory struggles have valued group loyalty and condemned betrayal, loyalty itself may be problematic, because remaining loyal to a community may require that one refrain from deconstructing the group identity on which the community is based. This essay investigates what loyalty is and whether loyalty is a virtue, and considers why, if loyalty is indeed a virtue, it may be one that is difficult to maintain in a context of oppression.
  •  12
    Critical Virtue Ethics: Understanding Oppression as Morally Damaging
    In Peggy DesAutels & Joanne Waugh (eds.), Feminists Doing Ethics, Rowman & Littlefield. 2001.
    A critically revised Aristotelian-based virtue ethics has something potentially useful to offer to those engaged in analyzing oppression and creating liberatory projects. A critical virtue ethics can help clarify one of the ways in which oppression interferes with flourishing; specifically, it helps clarify an aspect of oppression that can be called "moral damage."
  •  15
    Virtue and the Moral Life: Theological and Philosophical Perspectives (edited book)
    with Mark A. Wilson, Julie Hanlon Rubio, Mary M. Doyle Roche, S. J. Keenan, Margaret Urban Walker, Jamie Schillinger, Jean Porter, Jennifer A. Herdt, and Edmund N. Santurri
    Lexington Books. 2014.
    Virtue and the Moral Life brings together distinguished philosophers and theologians with younger scholars of consummate promise to produce ten essays that engage both academics and students of ethics. This collection explores the role virtues play in identifying the good life and the good society