University of Pennsylvania
Department of Philosophy
PhD
CV
Auburn Hills and Rochester Hills, Michigan, United States of America
  •  1308
    Scaling‐Up Alternative Food Networks
    Journal of Social Philosophy 46 (4): 434-448. 2015.
    Alternative Food Networks (AFNs), which include local food and Fair Trade, work to mitigate some of the many shortcomings of mainstream food systems. If AFNs have the potential to make the world’s food systems more just and sustainable (and otherwise virtuous) then we may have good reasons to scale them up. Unfortunately, it may not be possible to increase the market share of AFNs while preserving their current forms. Among other reasons, this is because there are limits to both the productive c…Read more
  •  808
    How Demanding is the Duty of Assistance?
    In Win-Chiat Lee & Helen M. Stacy (eds.), Economic Justice, Springer Dordrecht. pp. 205-220. 2013.
    Among Anglo-American philosophers, contemporary debates about global economic justice have often focused upon John Rawls’s Law of Peoples. While critics and advocates of this work disagree about its merits, there is wide agreement that, if today’s wealthiest societies acted in accordance with Rawls’s Duty of Assistance, there would be far less global poverty. I am skeptical of this claim. On my view, the Duty of Assistance is unlikely to require the kinds and amounts of assistance that would be …Read more
  •  1878
    Resisting Moral Permissiveness about Vaccine Refusal
    Public Affairs Quarterly 27 (1): 69-85. 2013.
    I argue that a parental prerogative to sometimes prioritize the interests of one’s children over the interests of others is insufficient to make the parental refusal of routine childhood vaccines morally permissible. This is because the moral permissibility of vaccine refusal follows from such a parental prerogative only if the only (weighty) moral reason in favor of vaccination is that vaccination is a means for promoting the interests of others. However, there are two additional weighty moral …Read more
  •  84
    Globalization and Global Justice: Shrinking Distance, Expanding Obligations (review)
    Philosophical Review 123 (2): 244-247. 2014.
    In Globalization and Global Justice, Nicole Hassoun advocates a political philosophy that is deeply-informed by empirical work and a utopianism that is constrained by considerations of real-world feasibility. As Hassoun acknowledges, these features are unusual for philosophical work, and she is right to think that the global justice literature needs to be more focused on practical questions and better-informed by facts about international political economy (15-7). However, it is also a mark of g…Read more