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Katie McLeod

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  •  Publications
    6
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  • All publications (6)
  •  44
    Characteristics and residence of First Nations patients and their use of health care services in Saskatchewan, Canada: informing First Nations and Métis health services
    with Gabe Lafond, Charlene R. A. Haver, Valerie McLeod, Sharon Clarke, and Beth Horsburgh
    Journal of Evaluation in Clinical Practice 23 (2): 294-300. 2017.
  •  75
    Blake's vision of slavery
    Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Institutes 15 (3/4): 242-252. 1952.
    History of Western Philosophy17th/18th Century Philosophy
  •  3
    Auto Slavery: The Labor Process in the American Automobile Industry, 1897—1950
    Science and Society 53 (1): 109-112. 1989.
    Value TheorySocial and Political Philosophy
  •  55
    The arms trade and the slave trade
    Journal of Applied Philosophy 16 (1). 1999.
    We have abandoned the slave trade, and come to abhor it. Could the same happen with the arms trade? Even if we are not pacifists, and allow some use of force in self‐defence, we must have serious ethical questions to ask about the trade in weaponry on which our economies are now so dependent. I distinguish the various forms these questions take for governments and individuals, and argue for some answers.
    Applied EthicsSocial and Political PhilosophyInternational EthicsGlobal Justice
  •  193
    The Slave Trade and Development
    Diogenes 45 (179): 23-29. 1997.
    When Captain Binger traveled the Niger bend between 1887 and 1889, he saw numerous villages that had been drained of their lifeblood or left in ruins by violent conflicts that had left their mark in the form of fortifications. Above all he was struck by the region's depopulation, which threatened to compromise the potential for colonial exploitation of the country. But these conditions did not prevail throughout the entire area. Prosperous towns were engaged in trade, war parties were living in …Read more
    When Captain Binger traveled the Niger bend between 1887 and 1889, he saw numerous villages that had been drained of their lifeblood or left in ruins by violent conflicts that had left their mark in the form of fortifications. Above all he was struck by the region's depopulation, which threatened to compromise the potential for colonial exploitation of the country. But these conditions did not prevail throughout the entire area. Prosperous towns were engaged in trade, war parties were living in ostentation, and rulers were collecting taxes from their subjects. The misery of the peasants’ lives contrasted with the opulent luxury of the courts and caravansaries. The black slave trade, and slavery itself, did not exert a uniform effect upon all of Africa.
    Social and Political PhilosophyEthicsInternational Ethics
  •  106
    Book Review:Slavery and Human Progress. David Brion Davis; Bribes. John T. Noonan, Jr (review)
    Ethics 96 (2): 429. 1986.
    Value TheoryApplied Ethics
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