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Samantha Brennan

University of Guelph
  •  Home
  •  Publications
    119
    • Most Recent
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    • Topics
  •  Events
    10
  •  News and Updates
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 More details
  • University of Guelph
    Department of Philosophy
    Professor
Email (login required)
Homepage
London, ON, Canada
Areas of Specialization
Applied Ethics
Normative Ethics
Social and Political Philosophy
Areas of Interest
Applied Ethics
Normative Ethics
Social and Political Philosophy
Philosophy of Gender, Race, and Sexuality
  • All publications (119)
  •  742
    Creating a Warmer Environment for Women in the Mathematical Sciences and in Philosophy
    with Rob Corless
    Speaking from our experience as department chairs in fields in which women are traditionally underrepresented, we offer reflections and advice on how one might move beyond the chilly climate and create a warmer environment for women students and faculty members.
    Women in Philosophy
  •  93
    Socialism, Feminism and Philosophy: A Radical Philosophy Reader, Sean Sayers and Peter Osborne, eds
    Marxist and Socialist FeminismSocialism and Marxism
  •  91
    Philosophy and Feminist Thinking, Jean Grimshaw
    Feminist Approaches to Philosophy
  •  27
    Spheres of Love: Toward a New Ethics of the Family, Stephen Post
  • Arthur Ripstein, Equality, Responsibility, and the Law (review)
    Philosophy in Review 21 288-290. 2001.
    Kantian Ethics, MiscEquality, Misc
  •  23
    Fighting Words: Individuals, Communities, and Liberties of Speech, Kent Greenawalt
  •  73
    Utilitarianism as a Public Philosophy, Robert Goodin
    Utilitarianism
  •  41
    Moral Literacy, or How to Do the Right Thing, Colin McGinn
    Cognitive Closure
  •  351
    Challenging Liberalism: Feminism as Political Critique by Lisa H. Schwartzman (review)
    Hypatia 23 (1): 220-223. 2008.
    Feminist Political PhilosophyPolitical Liberalism
  •  38
    Relational Selves and Thresholds for Rights
    RightsRights and Values
  •  67
    Pornography, The Theory: What Utilitarianism Did to Action, by Frances Ferguson
    PornographyUtilitarianism
  •  18
    Margins within the Marginal: Bi-invisibility and Intersexual Passing
    with Maren Behrensen
    In Dennis R. Cooley & Kelby Harrison (eds.), Passing/Out: Sexual Identity Veiled and Revealed, Ashgate Press. 2012.
  •  149
    See How She Runs: Feminists Rethink Fitness
    with Tracy Isaacs
    International Journal of Feminist Approaches to Bioethics 9 (2): 1-11. 2016.
    This special issue of IJFAB starts from the premise that fitness is a feminist issue, and, more specifically, it is an issue that ought to be of concern to feminists interested in bioethics. While a neglected concept in feminist bio-ethics, fitness is of key importance to women’s health and well-being. Not only that, it is also an area of women’s lives that invites unwelcome policing and advice from friends, family members, medical practitioners, and even strangers. People have a difficult time …Read more
    This special issue of IJFAB starts from the premise that fitness is a feminist issue, and, more specifically, it is an issue that ought to be of concern to feminists interested in bioethics. While a neglected concept in feminist bio-ethics, fitness is of key importance to women’s health and well-being. Not only that, it is also an area of women’s lives that invites unwelcome policing and advice from friends, family members, medical practitioners, and even strangers. People have a difficult time prying apart the idea of fitness from that of weight loss. Most women who embark on a fitness routine have weight loss among their primary goals.Since late 2011, we and a host of guest authors have been exploring the...
    Fitness
  •  81
    Moral Rights and Moral Math: Three Arguments Against Aggregation
    RightsRights and Values
  •  2007
    Children’s Rights, Well-Being, and Sexual Agency
    with Jennifer Epp
    In Alexander Bagattini and Colin MacLeod (ed.), The Wellbeing of Children in Theory and Practice, . forthcoming.
    Topics in Moral Value, MiscSexual Phenomena, MiscChildren's RightsChildren's Well-Being
  •  282
    Thresholds for Rights
    Dissertation, University of Illinois at Chicago. 1995.
    If you believe that there are restrictions on what we as moral agents can do to others, but that these restrictions can give way in the face of competing considerations, then you believe in thresholds for rights. In this dissertation I develop an account of thresholds for rights, in defence of a position which is often stated but rarely explained or defended. I begin with the obvious question: How much needs to be at stake before a right's claim is overridden? ;Less obvious, but equally crucial,…Read more
    If you believe that there are restrictions on what we as moral agents can do to others, but that these restrictions can give way in the face of competing considerations, then you believe in thresholds for rights. In this dissertation I develop an account of thresholds for rights, in defence of a position which is often stated but rarely explained or defended. I begin with the obvious question: How much needs to be at stake before a right's claim is overridden? ;Less obvious, but equally crucial, are questions about the distribution of the total which needs to be at stake. After developing a framework for answering that question, in subsequent chapters I deal with other factors which may influence our judgements about the overridability of rights' claims, including the numbers and identities of the agents involved.
    RightsRights and Values
  •  45
    Families, efficiency, gender, and justice
    I'm going to focus my comments on a relatively small part of Joe Heath's book, the section on the household division of labour. Although it's a small piece of a much larger picture, I've chosen this area for two reasons: First, it connects with my own interests in issues of family justice. Second, I think for me it highlights a potentially larger problem concerning the relationship between justice and efficiency. When Heath puts the contrast between those who place rights before efficiency in te…Read more
    I'm going to focus my comments on a relatively small part of Joe Heath's book, the section on the household division of labour. Although it's a small piece of a much larger picture, I've chosen this area for two reasons: First, it connects with my own interests in issues of family justice. Second, I think for me it highlights a potentially larger problem concerning the relationship between justice and efficiency. When Heath puts the contrast between those who place rights before efficiency in terms of a contrast between the US and Canadian health care systems, I find that I'm in agreement with the argument for efficiency. But when I think about the contrast in terms of the question of the gendered division of domestic labour, I'm less certain that I want to accord efficiency the kind of status it has according to Heath. (I must confess that I've always thought of Canada as the just society, rather than the efficient society. If it turns out..
  •  151
    An Essay on Rights
    Philosophical Review 105 (4): 557. 1996.
    Steiner’s book is an engaging and challenging romp through important issues in rights theory, moral and economic reasoning, theories of freedom, and questions of justice. An Essay on Rights develops and connects themes pursued by Steiner in a series of articles written over the past two decades.
    Rights and Values
  •  74
    Responsibility and Children's Rights: The Case for Restricting Parental Smoking
    with Angela White
    RightsChildren's Well-BeingRights and Values
  •  43
    An Essay on Rights, Hillel Steiner
    RightsThe Concept of Rights
  •  76
    The Liberal Rights of Feminist Liberalism
    LiberalismRightsRights and Values
  •  126
    How Many Parents Can a Child Have? Philosophical Reflections on the 'Three Parent Case'
    with Bill Cameron
    Dialogue 54 (1): 45-61. 2015.
    À la suite des récentes décisions légales reconnaissant plus de deux parents à certains enfants canadiens, nous nous demandons s’il existe des raisons morales pour limiter à deux le nombre de parents qu’un enfant peut avoir. Nous examinons quelques arguments traditionnels soutenant cette position et nous trouvons qu’ils ne suffisent pas pour la justifier. Nous présentons aussi un argument inspiré par le travail de Brighouse et Swift au sujet des bienfaits d’être parent, et nous montrons qu’il n’…Read more
    À la suite des récentes décisions légales reconnaissant plus de deux parents à certains enfants canadiens, nous nous demandons s’il existe des raisons morales pour limiter à deux le nombre de parents qu’un enfant peut avoir. Nous examinons quelques arguments traditionnels soutenant cette position et nous trouvons qu’ils ne suffisent pas pour la justifier. Nous présentons aussi un argument inspiré par le travail de Brighouse et Swift au sujet des bienfaits d’être parent, et nous montrons qu’il n’est pas assez fort pour soutenir la nécessité de limiter à deux le nombre de parents. En terminant, nous suggérons quelques autres façons de séparer de façon positive l’idée de «parent» des notions traditionnelles.
    Children's Well-Being
  •  78
    A Question of Values: New Canadian Perspectives in Ethics and Political Philosophy (edited book)
    with Tracy Isaacs and Michael Milde
    Rodopi. 1997.
    This volume contains ten chapters, each of which takes up a different question in contemporary moral or political philosophy. The volume has three parts: meta-ethics, issues in freedom and autonomy, and contemporary political philosophy. In the meta-ethical section, the chapters address issues concerning acts and their value, the plausibility of aggregation and counting with respect to the value of human lives, and the role of moral character in causing and explaining moral behavior. In the seco…Read more
    This volume contains ten chapters, each of which takes up a different question in contemporary moral or political philosophy. The volume has three parts: meta-ethics, issues in freedom and autonomy, and contemporary political philosophy. In the meta-ethical section, the chapters address issues concerning acts and their value, the plausibility of aggregation and counting with respect to the value of human lives, and the role of moral character in causing and explaining moral behavior. In the second section, the chapters take up questions about the connection between moral imagination and a plausible account of integrity, the connection between autonomy and rights to property, and the difficulties facing internalist accounts of autonomy. In the final section, the chapters address issues concerning feminist critiques of Rawlsian liberalism, the limits of liberalism and communitarianism, the importance of understanding Rawls's social contract as a contract for institutions, and the morality of nationalist movements. These chapters reflect a cross-section of the issues concerning value that are of contemporary scholarly interest in Canada and the United States.
    Political TheorySocial and Political Philosophy, Miscellaneous
  •  212
    Reconciling feminist politics and feminist ethics on the issue of rights
    Journal of Social Philosophy 30 (2). 1999.
    Should feminist ethical theories include rights as a component? There is a tension between feminist politics and the endorsement of the language of “women’s rights,” and feminist ethics and its critique of rights.1 In this paper I begin the project of reconciling moral theories that include rights as a component with feminist criticisms of rights. There are two parts to this project. First, I must respond to the criticisms feminists have made against rights theories in order to show that it is p…Read more
    Should feminist ethical theories include rights as a component? There is a tension between feminist politics and the endorsement of the language of “women’s rights,” and feminist ethics and its critique of rights.1 In this paper I begin the project of reconciling moral theories that include rights as a component with feminist criticisms of rights. There are two parts to this project. First, I must respond to the criticisms feminists have made against rights theories in order to show that it is possible for a moral theory that includes rights to be a feminist moral theory. Answering these criticisms is necessary if I am to establish that moral theories that include rights are among the candidate theories from which feminists might choose. Second, I must develop a feminist moral theory that encompasses rights, and argue for its superiority to other sorts of moral theories in order to show that a moral theory that encompasses rights is a plausible feminist moral theory. Going beyond responding to criticisms and developing a positive feminist rights theory is necessary if feminists are to find rights theories to be attractive candidate moral theories.2 In this paper I am concerned mostly with the first part of the project, responding to some feminist arguments against theorizing about morality in terms of rights, although in the course of responding to the objections I make remarks that might suggest ways in which some rights theories might be developed as feminist moral theories.
    Feminist EthicsRightsRights and Values
  •  60
    Children's Rights Revisioned: Philosophical Readings, Rosalind Ekman Ladd
    RightsRights and Values
  •  1262
    “Those Shoes Are Definitely Bicurious”: More Thoughts on the Politics of Fashion
    In Dennis Cooley and Kelby Harrison (ed.), Passing/Out: Sexual Identity Veiled and Revealed, . 2012.
    Queer Theory
  •  344
    The Moral Status of Children: Children’s Rights, Parents’ Rights, and Family Justice
    with Robert Noggle
    Social Theory and Practice 23 (1): 1-26. 1997.
    Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission. Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction prohibited without permission.
    Children's Well-BeingVarieties of JusticeRights and ValuesChildren's RightsParental RightsRights, Mi…Read more
    Children's Well-BeingVarieties of JusticeRights and ValuesChildren's RightsParental RightsRights, MiscJustice, MiscObligation
  •  41
    Libertarianism, Motivation, and Rights
    RightsRights and Values
  •  390
    Children's Choices or Children's Interests: Which Do Their Rights Protect?
    In David Archard & Colin M. [eds] Macleod (eds.), The Moral and Political Status of Children: New Essays, Oxford University Press. 2002.
    The often‐posed dichotomy between the interest and choice theory of rights can obfuscate a proper understanding of children's rights. We need a gradualist model in which the grounds for attributing rights to a being change in response to the development of autonomy. Rights for children initially function to protect their interests but, as they develop into full‐fledged autonomous choosers, rights function to ensure that their choices, even those that do not serve their welfare, are respected.
    RightsChildren's Well-BeingRights and Values
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