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137March MadnessTeaching Philosophy 31 (2): 141-150. 2008.What is at stake when students sell the highly sought-after basketball tickets they receive for free through a university’s lottery system? This article discusses a case in applied ethics taken from the experience of college students and extrapolates from that to the distribution of other scarce resources using lotteries. By examining an event relevant to the actual experience of students, we challenge them to see how normative moral theory may be used and what values are central to moral decisi…Read more
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127A Feminist Look at Ferdinand Schoeman’s Privacy and Social FreedomSocial Philosophy Today 12 267-275. 1996.
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160The Duty of SolidarityPhilosophy in the Contemporary World 4 (3): 24-33. 1997.Catholic Social Teaching of late has a lot more in common with feminist moral theory than might be evident at first glance. After a brief explanation of Catholic Social Teaching’s duty of solidarity, and a look at some of the feminist critiques of this solidarity, I point out some of the significant similarities between feminist ethics and the duty of solidarity. The last section focuses on community and care, the epistemological role of experience and the world view of the other, the centrality…Read more
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98Innocence and VulnerabilitySocial Philosophy Today 28 167-176. 2012.In Stephen Nathanson’s important new book, he offers and defends a definition of terrorism that relies on a conception of innocence that blends both moral innocence and status innocence. I argue that this understanding of innocence needs to be modified in two ways. First, status innocence ought to incorporate the notion of opposition. It is not just in becoming a soldier that one sacrifices status innocence; it is in the context of war or opposition. Second, I argue that moral innocence understo…Read more
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152Civil Disobedience in the Social Theory of Thomas AquinasThe Thomist 60 (3): 449-462. 1996.In this article I define civil disobedience and classify it into four forms based on motive and extent of dissent. I then present Thomas Aquinas's account for justified civil disobedience. After first determining how a law or system of laws is unjust, the duty (virtue) of obedience to just and unjust laws is discussed. Finally, I argue that of the four possible forms of civil disobedience, Aquinas's natural Law Theory only clearly allows the fourth, i.e., altruistic disobedience of an unjust sys…Read more
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176Seeking SolidarityPhilosophy Compass 10 (10): 725-735. 2015.Using relations of solidarity in global contexts, this article explores some of the debates about what constitutes solidarity. Three primary forms of solidarity are discussed, with particular attention to the different nature of the solidaristic relations and their moral obligations
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347Political solidarity and violent resistanceJournal of Social Philosophy 38 (1). 2007.This article examines the particular moral obligations of solidarity focusing on the solidary commitment against injustice or oppression. I argue that political solidarity entails three relationships—to other participants in action, to a cause or goal, and to those outside the unity of political solidarity. These relationships inform certain obligations. Activism is one of those obligations and I argue that violent activism is incompatible with the other relations and duties of solidarity. Ac…Read more
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104Feminist Political SolidarityIn Lisa Tessman (ed.), Feminist Ethics and Social and Political Philosophy: Theorizing the Non-Ideal, Springer. pp. 205--220. 2009.This article examines some of the conceptual history of collective political action within feminist movements beginning with sisterhood and moving to feminist political solidarity. I argue that feminist political solidarity is built on a commitment by individuals to form a unity in opposition to injustice or oppression. Three moral relations emerge from this understanding of feminist political solidarity: the relation to the cause, the relation among members of the solidary group, and the rela…Read more
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161The Female’s Rights in Society According to the Social Contract Theory of John LockeSocial Philosophy Today 8 247-260. 1993.
Villanova, Pennsylvania, United States of America
Areas of Interest
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| Philosophy of Gender, Race, and Sexuality |