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50Institutional Theories and International DevelopmentGlobal Justice Theory Practice Rhetoric 7 12-27. 2014.A recent trend in international development circles is ‘New Institutionalism’. In a slogan, the idea is just that good institutions matter. The slogan itself is so innocuous as to be hardly worth comment. But the push to improve institutional quality has the potential to have a much less innocuous impact on aid efforts and other aspects of international development. This paper provides a critical introduction to some of the literature on institutional quality. It looks, in particular, at an argu…Read more
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34Fair Trade: An Imperfect Obligation?Global Justice : Theory Practice Rhetoric 10 (2). 2018.Fair Trade is under fire. Some critics argue, for instance, that there is no obligation to purchase Fair Trade certified products and that doing so may even be counter-productive. Others worry that well-justified conceptions of what makes trade fair can conflict. Yet others suggest that the common arguments for Fair Trade cannot justify purchasing Fair Trade certified goods, in particular. This paper starts by sketching one common argument for Fair Trade and defends it against this last line of …Read more
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80Distributing global health resources: Contemporary issues in political philosophyPhilosophy Compass 14 (11). 2019.How should states and international organizations allocate global health resources? This paper examines proposals for distributing these resources in the literature. First, we look at the literature on the metrics for measuring what matters and consider how they might be modified to avoid some common objections—e.g., that these measures discriminate against the disabled or fail to give due weight to helping the young (or old) or those in present (or future) generations. Second, we canvas existin…Read more
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77Global Justice: What is Necessary to Legitimate CoercionJournal of Moral Philosophy 16 (5): 563-589. 2019.There is little agreement about what grounds obligations of distributive justice. This paper defends cosmopolitan coercion theory against recent criticism that coercive rule is not even sufficient to generate obligations of distributive justice. On one of the most sustained arguments against the idea that coercion is sufficient to generate obligations of distributive justice, critics object that coercion, and other nonvoluntary relationships, cannot fix the scope, or content, of these obligation…Read more
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139The Human Right to Health: A DefenseJournal of Social Philosophy 51 (2): 158-179. 2019.Journal of Social Philosophy, EarlyView.
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1183The State of the Discipline: New Data on Women Faculty in PhilosophyErgo: An Open Access Journal of Philosophy 6. 2019.This paper presents data on the representation of women at 98 philosophy departments in the United States, which were ranked by the Philosophical Gourmet Report (PGR) in 2015 as well as all of those schools on which data from 2004 exist. The paper makes four points in providing an overview of the state of the field. First, all programs reveal a statistically significant increase in the percentage of women tenured/tenure-track faculty, since 2004. Second, out of the 98 US philosophy departments s…Read more
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157Nicole Hassoun here makes a philosophical argument for health, and access to essential medicines, as essential human rights, and she proposes the Global Health Impact system as a way to ensure those rights. She reports how life-saving medicines are inaccessible and costly for the global poor, and that rather than focusing on treatments for critical, deadly global health problems, pharmaceutical companies instead invest in more profitable drugs. To address this problem, Hassoun's proposal will ra…Read more
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107Basic Capacities, Coercion, and Liberal LegitimacyJournal of Social Philosophy 46 (2): 178-196. 2015.
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67Global Justice and International Affairs, edited by Thom Brooks (review)Journal of Moral Philosophy 13 (2): 249-252. 2016.Global Justice and International Affairs is a helpful collection of papers published in the Journal of Moral Philosophy. The collection is a testament to the Journal of Moral Philosophy’s quality and commitment to publishing work on important topics. The book is divided into four parts and brings together key articles from the journal on sovereignty and self-determination, cosmopolitanism and nationalism, global poverty and international distributive justice, and war and terrorism. On one way of…Read more
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169Global Justice and Charity: A Brief for a New Approach to Empirical PhilosophyPhilosophy Compass 9 (12): 884-893. 2014.What does global justice or charity requires us to give to other people? There is a large theoretical literature on this question. There is much less experimental work in political philosophy relevant to answering it. Perhaps for this reason, this literature has yet to have any major impact on theoretical discussions of global justice or charity. There is, however, some experimental research in behavioral economics that has helped to shape the field and a few relevant studies by political philos…Read more
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129Globalization and Global Justice in ReviewLaw, Ethics and Philosophy 2. 2014.Globalization connects everyone, from the world’s poorest slum dweller tothe richest billionaire. Globalization and Global Justice starts by giving a newargument for the conclusion that coercive international institutions —whosesubjects who are likely to face sanctions for violation of their rules— mustensure that everyone they coerce secures basic necessities like food, waterand medicines. It then suggests that it is possible for coercive institutionsto fulfill their obligations by, for instanc…Read more
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82Fair Trade: An Imperfect Obligation?Global Justice: Theory Practice Rhetoric 10 (2). 2017.Fair Trade is under fire. Some critics argue, for instance, that there is no obligation to purchase Fair Trade certified products and that doing so may even be counter-productive. Others worry that well-justified conceptions of what makes trade fair can conflict. Yet others suggest that the common arguments for Fair Trade cannot justify purchasing Fair Trade certified goods, in particular. This paper starts by sketching one common argument for Fair Trade and defends it against this last line of …Read more
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83Globalization and Global Justice: Shrinking Distance, Expanding ObligationsCambridge University Press. 2012.The face of the world is changing. The past century has seen the incredible growth of international institutions. How does the fact that the world is becoming more interconnected change institutions' duties to people beyond borders? Does globalization alone engender any ethical obligations? In Globalization and Global Justice, Nicole Hassoun addresses these questions and advances a new argument for the conclusion that there are significant obligations to the global poor. First, she argues that t…Read more
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435Eternally Separated Lovers: The Argument from LoveAustralasian Journal of Philosophy 93 (4): 633-643. 2015.A message scribbled irreverently on the mediaeval walls of the Nonberg cloister says this: ‘Neither of us can go to heaven unless the other gets in.’ It suggests an argument against the view that those who love people who suffer in hell can be perfectly happy, or even free from all suffering, in heaven. This paper considers the challenge posed by this thought to the coherence of the traditional Christian doctrine on which there are some people in hell who are suffering and others in heaven who a…Read more
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232Consciousness and the Moral Permissibility of Infanticide1Journal of Applied Philosophy 25 (1): 45-55. 2008.abstract In this paper, we present a conditional argument for the moral permissibility of some kinds of infanticide. The argument is based on a certain view of consciousness and the claim that there is an intimate connection between consciousness and infanticide. In bare outline, the argument is this: it is impermissible to intentionally kill a creature only if the creature is conscious; it is reasonable to believe that there is some time at which human infants are not conscious; therefore, it i…Read more
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4The Case for Renewable Energy and a New Energy PlanInternational Journal of Environmental, Cultural, Economic andSocial Sustainability 1 (5): 197-208. 2005.
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19Distance, Moral Relevance ofIn Hugh LaFollette (ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Ethics, Wiley-blackwell. 2013.
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129An aspect of variable population poverty comparisons: Does adding a rich person to a population reduce poverty?Economics and Philosophy 30 (2): 163-174. 2014.Poverty indexes are essential for monitoring poverty, setting targets for poverty reduction, and tracking progress on these goals. This paper suggests that further justification is necessary for using the main poverty indexes in the literature in any of these ways. It does so by arguing that poverty should not decline with the mere addition of a rich person to a population and showing that the standard indexes do not satisfy this axiom. It, then, suggests a way of modifying these indexes to avoi…Read more
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47Designer Biology: The Ethics of Intensively Engineering Biological and Ecological Systems (edited book)Lexington Books. 2013.Designer Biology: The Ethics of Intensively Engineering Biological and Ecological Systems consists of thirteen chapters that address the ethical issues raised by technological intervention and design across a broad range of biological and ecological systems. Among the technologies addressed are geoengineering, human enhancement, sex selection, genetic modification, and synthetic biology.
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97Sustaining Cultures in the Face of GlobalizationCulture and Dialogue 2 (2): 73-98. 2012.Arguments for the preservation of culture are based on an extremely problematic essentialist conception of culture as a fixed entity. The inadequacy of the essentialist conception has received increasing recognition, but an adequate positive conception has yet to take its place. This essay reframes the debate about cultural preservation by proposing a new conception of culture as conversation. The new conception acknowledges the fluidity and internal contestation that occurs within actual cultur…Read more
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89Coercion, Legitimacy, and Individual FreedomJournal of Philosophical Research 39 191-198. 2014.In “World Poverty and Individual Freedom” , I argue that the global order—because it is coercive—is obligated to do what it can to ensure that its subjects are capable of autonomously agreeing to its rule. This requires helping them meet their basic needs. In “World Poverty and Not Respecting Individual Freedom Enough,” Jorn Sonderholm asserts that this argument is invalid and unsound, in part, because it is too demanding. This article explains why Sonderholm’s critique is mistaken and misses th…Read more
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92Making the Case for Foreign AidPublic Affairs Quarterly 24 (1): 1-20. 2010.This paper addresses an important methodological question for a recent debate in global justice: What types of data are necessary for settling normative debates about foreign aid? Recently, several philosophers have considered the case for foreign aid and have concluded that foreign aid is either ineffective or counter-productive. This paper considers what kinds of evidence those doing applied philosophy must use to support different claims about aid’s efficacy. Then, using some of the best avai…Read more
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229Global health impact: A basis for labeling and licensing campaigns?Developing World Bioethics 12 (3): 121-134. 2012.Most of the world's health problems afflict poor countries and their poorest inhabitants. There are many reasons why so many people die of poverty-related causes. One reason is that the poor cannot access many of the existing drugs and technologies they need. Another, is that little of the research and development (R&D) done on new drugs and technologies benefits the poor. There are several proposals on the table that might incentivize pharmaceutical companies to extend access to essential drugs…Read more
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213Human Rights and the Minimally Good LifeRes Philosophica 90 (3): 413-438. 2013.All people have human rights and, intuitively, there is a close connection between human rights, needs, and autonomy. The two main theories about the natureand value of human rights often fail to account for this connection. Interest theories, on which rights protect individuals’ important interests, usually fail to capturethe close relationship between human rights and autonomy; autonomy is not constitutive of the interests human rights protect. Will theories, on which human rights protect indi…Read more
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98The Duty to Disclose (Even More) Adverse Clinical Trial ResultsAmerican Journal of Bioethics 9 (8): 33-34. 2009.No abstract
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