• Radical Liberalism and Social Freedom
    In Roger E. Bissell, Chris Matthew Sciabarra & Edward W. Younkins (eds.), The Dialectics of Liberty: Exploring the Context of Human Freedom, Roman & Littlefield. pp. 255-74. 2019.
    Defends a link between political and social freedom, and argues both for an understanding of social freedom and for institutional safeguards for this kind of freedom.
  • Incommensurable Goods
    with Jere L. Fox
    In Jonathan Crowe & Constance Youngwon Lee (eds.), Research Handbook on Natural Law Theory, Edward Elgar Publishing. pp. 252-65. 2019.
    Updates earlier arguments for the plausibility of the thesis that basic aspects of well being are incommensurable, a thesis central to new classical natural law theory. Responds to objections from Jonathan Crowe and Jason Brennan.
  • Natural Law, the Common Good, and the State
    with Jere L. Fox
    In Jonathan Crowe & Constance Youngwon Lee (eds.), Research Handbook on Natural Law Theory, Edward Elgar Publishing. pp. 347-68. 2019.
    Argues for a framework understanding of the common good, one that does not depend on the existence and operation of the state, in the context of new classical natural law theory.
  • Natural Law and Non-Aggression
    Acta Juridica Hungarica 51 (2): 79-96. 2010.
    Argues that new classical natural law theory can provide an alternative grounding for what is often called the "non-aggression principle."
  • Intellectual Property and Natural Law
    Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy 36 58-88. 2011.
    Explains why a natural law theory of property rights need not be hospitable to intellectual property.
  • Anarchism as a Research Program in Law
    Griffith Law Review 21 293-206. 2012.
    Examines various aspects of anarchism relevant to or illuminated by legal theory.
  • Reconciling Rawls and Hayek?
    The Independent Review 17 577-88. 2013.
    Assesses John Tomasi's Free Market Fairness.
  • Left-Wing Market Anarchism and Natural Law
    Studies in Emergent Order 7 314-24. 2014.
    Defends the variety of natural-law anarchism developed in Anarchy and Legal Order against multiple criticisms, primarily methodological.
  • Incommensurable Basic Goods
    Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy 40 1-16. 2015.
    Defends the view that basic aspects of well being should be understood as incommensurable.
  • Toward a Theology and Ethics of Friendship
    Dissertation, Cambridge University. 1991.
    Examines a range of issues related to the experience of close interpersonal friendship, including the nature of friendship and links between friendship and spirituality, ethics, and politics. Combines philosophical, religious, and social-scientific perspectives.
  • Contracts and Vows
    Oxford Journal of Law and Religion 5 (3): 482-509. 2016.
    Examines analogies between contracts and vows and uses analytical tools from contract law to highlight the limits of religious vows.
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    The Conscience of an Anarchist
    Cobden Press. 2011.
    Anarchy happens when people organize their lives peacefully and voluntarily— without the aggressive violence of the state. This simple but powerful book explains why the state is illegitimate, unnecessary, and dangerous, and what we can do to begin achieving real freedom.
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    A Good Life in the Market: An Introduction to Business Ethics
    American Institute for Economic Research. 2019.
    A Good Life in the Market develops a framework for thinking about business ethics, examining the nature and potential of markets before crisply exploring a set of important issues—from immigration to intellectual property to boycotts to workplace governance. Provocative, engaging, and conversational, Gary Chartier offers tools and perspectives that will help you flourish in the world of business.
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    This book is a critical examination of John Rawls's account of the normative grounds of international law, arguing that Rawls unjustifiably treats groups - rather than particular persons - as foundational to his model of international justice.
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    The Logic of Commitment
    Routledge. 2017.
    This book develops and defends a conception of commitment and explores its limits. Gary Chartier shows how commitment serves to resolve conflicts between ordinary moral intuitions and the reality that the basic aspects of human well-being are incommensurable. He outlines a variety of overlapping and mutually reinforcing rationales for making commitments, explores the relationship between commitment and vocation and the relevance of commitment to love, and notes some reasons why it might make sen…Read more
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    Social Class and State Power: Exploring an Alternative Radical Tradition
    with David M. Hart, Ross Miller Kenyon, and Roderick T. Long
    Palgrave Macmillan. 2017.
    This collection seeks to excavate the tradition of radical liberal class analysis, which predated and inspired Marx's reflections on class. Liberal class theory is distinctive because it regards relationship with the state as constitutive rather than just indicative of social class membership. Along with an introduction that frames the discussion historically and conceptually, Social Class and State Power provides readers with easy access to provocative texts from the early modern period to the …Read more
  • A collection of classical and contemporary sources highlighting the radical potential of the individualist anarchist tradition.
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    Flourishing Lives: Exploring Natural Law Liberalism
    Cambridge University Press. 2019.
    This book elaborates, illuminates, and illustrates a confident and attractive account of social and political liberalism in light of a rich understanding of flourishing and fulfilment rooted in a version of natural law theory. Examining issues in ethics, law, and politics - including consumer responsibility, the assignment of grades by teachers, deception by lawyers, war and empire, and the use of victim-impact statements in parole decisions - Gary Chartier shows how natural law theory can effec…Read more
  • Victims and Parole Decisions
    Jahrbuch für Recht Und Ethik 11. 2003.
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    Argues that it is possible to regard land reform measures as just even while rejecting the result in Kelo.
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    Natural Law and Animal Rights
    Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 23 (1): 33-46. 2010.
    The new classical natural law theorists have been decidedly skeptical about claims that non-human animals deserve serious moral consideration. Their theory features an array of incommensurable, nonfungible basic aspects of welfare and a set of principles governing participation in and pursuit of these goods. Attacks on animals’ interests seem to be inconsistent with one or more of these principles. But leading natural law theorists maintain that animals do not participate in basic aspects of wel…Read more
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    This book advances a persuasive account of Christian belief organized around the theme of love while also employing love as a constraint on theological formulation. Throughout, Gary Chartier seeks to understand divine action in ways that make it possible to affirm divine love in the face of evil. The Analogy of Love offers a stimulating model for thinking about God and the world.
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    On the threshold argument against consumer meat purchases
    Journal of Social Philosophy 37 (2). 2005.
    Lodges a number of challenges to the threshold argument on the basis of which some consequentialists have objected to consumer meat purchases. Maintains that the argument misunderstands relevant market dynamics.
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    Marriage is ordinarily a public practice, supported by, as well as supportive of, society. But it need not fall within the purview of the state. Public Practice, Private Law articulates a conception of marriage as a morally rich and important institution that ought to be subject to private rather than legislative or judicial ordering. It elaborates a robust understanding of marriage that captures what both different-sex and same-sex couples might see as valuable about their relationships. It exp…Read more
  •  111
    Non-human animals and process theodicy
    Religious Studies 42 (1): 3-26. 2006.
    I argue that that the suffering of non-human animals poses some potentially knotty difficulties for process theodicy. To respond satisfactorily to the problem of evil as it involves animals, process theists will, I argue, need either to defend some form of consequentialism or make a number of potentially plausible but certainly contestable empirical claims. I begin this internal critique by explaining the nature of the process response to the problem of evil. I explain how process thought can re…Read more
  •  112
    Sweatshops, labor rights, and comparative advantage
    Oregon Review of International Law 10 (1): 149--188. 2008.
    A normatively appropriate response to the exploitation of sweatshop labor in developing countries should center on labor rights. Satisfactorily secured labor rights will help workers to craft adequate compensation packages and workplace standards that keep them safe while allowing them to compete effectively in the global marketplace. Labor rights provide a more flexible and economically reasonable alternative to trade barriers as sources of protection for workers.
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    Abstract.My focus is on the problem of plant closings, which have become increasingly common as the deindustrialization of America has proceeded since the early 1980s. In a well‐known article, Joseph William Singer proposed that workers who sued to keep a plant open in the face of a planned closure might appropriately be regarded as possessing a reliance‐based interest in the plant that merited some protection. I seek to extend this sort of argument in two ways. In the first half of the paper, I…Read more
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    Liberating Capitalism? (review)
    Journal of Ayn Rand Studies 15 (1): 97-103. 2015.
    Jason Brennan's book Why Not Capitalism? offers a distinctive and engaging defense of the positive moral value of markets and property rights. Directly confronting influential socialist philosopher G. A. Cohen's argument for the moral superiority of socialism, Brennan shows that a market society embodies distinctive moral excellences that we have good reason to embrace.
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    This book develops an account of freedom of expression rooted in a broader understanding of human flourishing. It is intended to highlight reasons for not only political institutions but also noncoercive social institutions—employers, churches, clubs—to value and safeguard expressive freedom. It emphasizes a set of overlapping and mutually reinforcing considerations supportive of this kind of freedom, including property rights, class-analytic and public-choice-theoretic understandings of state a…Read more