•  113
    Human Security and Liberal Peace
    with J. Peter Burgess
    Public Reason 1 (1): 91-104. 2009.
    This paper addresses a recent wave of criticisms of liberal peacebuilding operations. We decompose the critics’ argument into two steps, one which offers a diagnosis of what goes wrong when things go wrong in peacebuilding operations, and a second, which argues on the basis of the first step that there is some deep principled flaw in the very idea of liberal peacebuilding. We show that the criticism launched in the argument’s first step is valid and important, but that the second step by no mean…Read more
  •  745
    A Role for Coercive Force in the Theory of Global Justice?
    In Thom Brooks (ed.), New Waves in Gobal Justice, Palgrave-macmillan. forthcoming.
    The first wave of philosophical work on global justice focused largely on the distribution of economic resources, and on the development or reformation of institutions relevant thereto. More recently, however, the horizon has broadened significantly, to also include a concern with the global spread of the right to live under reasonable legal institutions and representative forms of government (cf. “a human right to democracy”). Thus, while the first wave was focused primarily on international (…Read more