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29Biggar, Nigel. Colonialism: A Moral Reckoning. London: Collins 2023. Pp. xvi, 480. Bibliography. Index (review)Journal of Value Inquiry 1-5. forthcoming.
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37Urban Redevelopment and Land ReformLegal Theory 11 (4): 363-385. 2005.So-called “urban renewal” programs provide some compensation for the properties they take, but no compensation is possible for the subjective value of these lands to the individuals displaced and the indignity inflicted by uprooting them from their homes…. [E]xtending the concept of public purpose to encompass any economically beneficial goal guarantees that these losses will fall disproportionately on poor communities. Those communities are not only systematically less likely to put their lands…Read more
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13Possession and ExpressionIn An Ecological Theory of Free Expression, Springer Verlag. pp. 13-22. 2018.Robust protections for just possessory rights ground and enable participation in the ecosystem of expression. These protections are rooted in the Principle of Fairness and reflect the importance of a broad range of complementary values.
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14The Instrumental Value of ExpressionIn An Ecological Theory of Free Expression, Springer Verlag. pp. 67-85. 2018.Respecting expressive activity enables the expressive ecosystem to generate a range of benefits related to knowledge, practical reasoning, æsthetic experience, and other aspects of flourishing, as well as to institutional accountability, the discovery of valuable forms of life, and the effective functioning of markets.
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16Respecting and Promoting Free Expression: Case StudiesIn An Ecological Theory of Free Expression, Springer Verlag. pp. 115-135. 2018.Case studies, both real and fictional, help to clarify the significance and implications of the ecological theory of free expression for both state and non-state actors. These concern “intellectual property” rights, putative rights against defamation, state maintenance of controversial monuments, attempted suppression by the legal system of the cinematic documentation of rights-violating conduct, a journalist’s tweets critical of the President, a fictional sports agent’s distribution to his co-w…Read more
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20Protecting ExpressionIn An Ecological Theory of Free Expression, Springer Verlag. pp. 1-12. 2018.The Introduction explains the book’s purpose—describing an ecological theory of free expression, focused on an institutional environment capable of respecting and furthering expressive activity and realizing the goods associated with it. It also outlines the natural-law approach that frames the book’s arguments. It goes on to preview those arguments—focused on possessory rights, the range of putative and actual injuries that might be thought to trigger restraints on expressive activity, the risk…Read more
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11Ecology and ExpressionIn An Ecological Theory of Free Expression, Springer Verlag. pp. 137-141. 2018.People should be free to contribute to the expressive ecosystem, and that ecosystem should be expected to flourish, because of possessory rights, the value of autonomy, the link between expression and flourishing, the instrumental worth of expressive acts, the nature of legally cognizable injury, and reasons to be suspicious of state actors.
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19Autonomy, Fulfillment, and ExpressionIn An Ecological Theory of Free Expression, Springer Verlag. pp. 57-65. 2018.There are multiple reasons for state and private actors to respect people’s autonomy. Respecting expressive activity is a way of respecting the personal autonomy of those who engage in this kind of activity and those who receive their communications, and so of facilitating the flourishing of both.
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14Expression on Government Land, by Government Workers, and in Non-Governmental AssociationsIn An Ecological Theory of Free Expression, Springer Verlag. pp. 87-114. 2018.The use of publicly accessible government land, expressive activity by government workers, and expressive acts within and on behalf of non-governmental associations all raise distinctive problems, but the principles elaborated in previous chapters show how these problems can be satisfactorily addressed.
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16Public Choice, Class, and the Ecology of Free ExpressionIn An Ecological Theory of Free Expression, Springer Verlag. pp. 51-56. 2018.State actors should not be trusted to police-expressive activity not least because they can be expected to do so as a way of advancing their personal and class interests.
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18Expression and InjuryIn An Ecological Theory of Free Expression, Springer Verlag. pp. 23-50. 2018.Expressive acts do not, in general, constitute, necessitate, or effect the kinds of injuries for which legal remedies should be available. In particular, such acts do not, in the relevant sense, cause violence. And insult and offense—often enough not genuine injuries at all—do not warrant legal liability. Expressive acts that involve the planning and coordination of violence or the commission of fraud or that evoke post-traumatic stress may sometimes be appropriate predicates for liability.
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3Lindsey, Brink, and Teles, Steven. The Captured Economy: How the Powerful Enrich Themselves, Slow Down Growth, and Increase Inequality (review)Journal of Value Inquiry 52 (4): 517-521. 2018.
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26Vallier, Kevin. All the Kingdoms of the World: on Radical Religious Alternatives to Liberalism. New York: Oxford UP 2023. Pp. x, 320. 978-0197611371 (review)Journal of Value Inquiry 1-6. forthcoming.
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Reason and the ResurrectionConversations in Religion and Theology 4 (1): 11-28. 2004.Examines Richard Swinburne's joint case for an orthodox Christian understanding of incarnation and resurrection.
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Natural law and socioeconomic rightsIn Tom P. S. Angier, Iain T. Benson & Mark Retter (eds.), The Cambridge handbook of natural law and human rights, Cambridge University Press. 2022.
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32Christianity and the Nation-State: A Study in Political TheologyCambridge University Press. 2023.In Christianity and the Nation-State, Gary Chartier provocatively offers readers unexpected critical distance from some familiar ways of understanding, justifying, and navigating existing political arrangements. People in multiple societies are posing important questions about the authority and functions of the contemporary nation-state and about potential alternatives to this seemingly inescapable institution. Chartier seeks to develop a distinctive theological response to the conditions prompt…Read more
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30Loving Creation: The Task of the Moral LifeFortress. 2022.Is it true that all we need is love? Does love capture the essence of Christian ethics? Does a love-centered ethic need to be impartial in a way that leaves no room at ground-level for relationships and projects? What is the place of well-being in an ethic of love? Loving Creation: The Task of Moral Life seeks to answer these questions by showing how a love-ethic and an ethic of creation are not at odds but rather reinforce each other. Gary Chartier articulates a love-centered creation ethic--or…Read more
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7Understanding FriendshipFortress Press. 2022.An exploration of the meaning of friendship and its moral, political, and spiritual significance.
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Contested Practices: Arthur Isak Applbaum's Ethics for AdversariesJahrbuch für Recht Und Ethik/Annual Review of Law and Ethics 16 254-77. 2002.Examines Applbaum's elaboration, on contractualist grounds, of a plausible understanding of adversarial ethics, primarily but not exclusively in the contest of the legal system. Raises criticisms of what are arguably unnecessary concessions and offers the behavior of US government lawyers in the Korematsu case as an example for consideration.
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Pirate Constitutions and Workplace DemocracyJahrbuch für Recht Und Ethik/Annual Review of Law and Ethics 18 449-67. 2010.Considers Peter Leeson's arguments regarding the economic viability of workplace democracy.
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Review of Brian Hebblethwaite, Ethics and Religion in a Pluralistic Age (review)Andrews University Seminary Studies 36 128-31. 1998.
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Review of Nicholas Lash, The Beginning and the End of 'Religion' (review)Andrews University Seminary Studies 37 125-28. 1999.
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2Review of Edward P. Stringham, ed., Anarchy, State, and Public Choice (review)The Review of Austrian Economics 28 361-63. 2015.
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Review of Alister McGrath, Understanding the Trinity (review)Religious Studies Review 17 143. 1991.
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La Sierra UniversityDepartment of Management and Marketing, Zapara School of BusinessDistinguished Professor