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547Procreative-parenting, love's reasons and the demands of moralityPhilosophical Quarterly 68 (270): 77-97. 2018.Many philosophers believe that the relationship between a parent and a child is objectively valuable, but few believe that there is any objective value in first creating a child in order to parent her. But if it is indeed true that all of the objective value of procreative-parenting comes from parenting, then it is hard to see how procreative-parenting can overcome two particularly pressing philosophical challenges. A first challenge is to show that it is morally permissible for prospective pare…Read more
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910The Anarchist's Myth: Autonomy, Children, and State LegitimacyHypatia 30 (1): 370-385. 2015.Philosophical anarchists have made their living criticizing theories of state legitimacy and the duty to obey the law. The most prominent theories of state legitimacy have been called into doubt by the anarchists' insistence that citizens' lack of consent to the state renders the whole justificatory enterprise futile. Autonomy requires consent, they argue, and justification must respect autonomy. In this essay, I want to call into question the weight of consent in protecting our capacity for aut…Read more
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3848Young on Responsibility and Structural Injustice (review)Criminal Justice Ethics 32 (3): 247-257. 2013.Our aim in this essay is to critically examine Iris Young’s arguments in her important posthumously published book against what she calls the liability model for attributing responsibility, as well as the arguments that she marshals in support of what she calls the social connection model of political responsibility. We contend that her arguments against the liability model of conceiving responsibility are not convincing, and that her alternative to it is vulnerable to damaging objections.
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550Challenging the Burqa BanJournal of Intercultural Studies 34 (1): 89-101. 2013.Following the successful campaign to have the burqa and niqab banned from public use in France, and the continuing advocacy to have these garments banned in other Western liberal societies, I examine whether the two strongest challenges to the burqa and niqab succeed in justifying a ban on these forms of veil. Although I argue that they both fail in supporting a ban, the fact that some Muslim women may be coerced into full veiling gives liberal states a moral duty to interfere. In the light of t…Read more
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165On the Value of Intimacy in ProcreationJournal of Value Inquiry 48 (3): 349-369. 2014.What is wrong with anonymous surrogacy and gamete donation? Many feminists have argued that these practices are inherently exploitative or alienating. Yet, one can easily conceive of a world where donating a sperm or egg, and getting pregnant on behalf of someone else are considered highly valuable professional services, which are highly-paid and part of well regulated industries. In this ideal world, no one becomes a gamete donor or a surrogate out of economic necessity or desperation, but beca…Read more
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99Vulnerable Populations and the Duty to ExcludeJournal of Ethics and Global Politics 9 (1): 33501. 2016.How should states respond to the departure of talented individuals from the developing to the developed world--the so-called brain drain? In Debating Brain Drain, Gillian Brock and Michael Blake investigate whether restrictions on emigration can be justified in order to avoid the harmful effects of the brain drain. In this piece, I argue that the question of whether states have the right to limit the exit of their skilled citizens cannot be answered in isolation from the question of what global …Read more
Sydney, NSW, Australia
Areas of Specialization
| Social and Political Philosophy |
Areas of Interest
| Applied Ethics |
| Feminist Philosophy |
| Biomedical Ethics |