•  27
    Creative Resolve and the Threshold for a Minimally Good Life: A Reply to Critics
    Journal of Social Philosophy 57 (1): 115-121. 2026.
    Journal of Social Philosophy, EarlyView.
  •  3
    Global Justice
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2015.
  •  90
    Variable Population Poverty Comparisons
    Journal of Development Economics 98 (2): 238-241. 2012.
    This paper demonstrates that the property of Replication Invariance, generally considered to be an innocuous requirement for the extension of fixed-population poverty comparisons to variable-population contexts, is incompatible with other plausible variable- and fixed-population axioms. This fact raises questions about what constitutes an appropriate headcount assessment of poverty, in terms of whether one should focus on the proportion, or the absolute numbers, of the population in poverty. Thi…Read more
  •  56
    Measuring needs: philosophy and the science of measurement
    Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy. forthcoming.
    Policy makers increasingly use measures of individuals’ ability to fulfill their basic needs – from the Genuine Progress Indicator and multidimensional poverty indexes, to metrics in the World Happiness Report alongside traditional economic indexes like Gross Domestic Product. This paper defends the ‘philosophy first’ approach to measuring individuals’ ability to meet their basic needs. It argues that scientists should employ a philosophically well-justified theory of basic needs to develop meas…Read more
  •  1
    Good Practices for Improving Representation in Philosophy Departments,
    Apa Studies on Philosophy and the Black Experience 24 (2): 8-21. 2025.
    The following “Good Practices” document was developed by the Women in Philosophy / Demographics in Philosophy group under the directorship of Nicole Hassoun, with substantial contributions from co-directors, advisory board members, and collaborators from 2018 to 2024. It is the result of extensive feedback and discussion from many sources including: two large panel discussions at Pacific APA meetings in 2018–2019; email queries to a large number of journal editors and department heads from 2019 …Read more
  •  47
    Legitimate distribution without legislation
    Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy. forthcoming.
    When is it legitimate for technocrats to make decisions with significant allocative consequences? With the rapid expansion of the administrative state and international organizations, technocratic decisions with significant allocative consequences now affect many people’s basic life prospects and technocrats are not as democratically accountable as most elected officials, so answering this question is incredibly important. This article proposes a necessary condition for legitimate technocratic d…Read more
  •  31
    Raz on the Right to Autonomy
    European Journal of Philosophy 22 (1): 96-109. 2014.
    Abstract:InThe Morality of Freedom, Joseph Raz argues against a right to autonomy. This argument helps to distinguish his theory from his competitors'. For, many liberal theories ground such a right. Some even defend entirely autonomy‐based accounts of rights. This paper suggests that Raz's argument against a right to autonomy raises an important dilemma for his larger theory. Unless his account of rights is limited in some way, Raz's argument applies against almost all (purported) rights, not j…Read more
  •  97
    The Minimally Good Life Account of Abortion's Permissibility
    with Nicholas Kreuder
    Public Affairs Quarterly 38 (3): 213-238. 2024.
    Judith Jarvis Thomson argued that abortion is permissible because no one must sacrifice their rights to bodily autonomy. However, assuming a fetus has full moral personhood, and focusing on when abortion is unjust in particular, we argue that Thomson's view of what we ought to sacrifice to aid others is too impoverished. Instead, we argue that abortion is permissible when pregnancy threatens the ability of the mother, or the child, to live minimally well. After explaining the minimally good life…Read more
  • Consumption and non-consumption
    In Darrel Moellendorf & Heather Widdows (eds.), The Routledge Handbook of Global Ethics, Routledge. 2014.
  •  56
    This data includes information on authorship gender in Leiter Ranked, Unranked, and Interdisciplinary Philosophy Journals between 1900 & 2010.
  •  96
    Global Health Impact: Human rights, access to medicines, and measurement
    Developing World Bioethics 24 (1): 37-48. 2024.
    Should people have a legal human right to health? And, if so, what exactly does protecting this right require? This essay defends some answers to these questions recently articulated in Global Health Impact. It explains how these answers depend on a particular way of thinking about health and the minimally good life, how quality of life matters at and over time, what various agents should do to help people who are unable to live well enough, and many other things. Moreover, it suggests some ways…Read more
  •  151
    The Past 110 Years: Historical Data on the Underrepresentation of Women in Philosophy Journals
    with Sherri Conklin, Michael Nekrasov, and Jevin West
    Ethics 132 (3): 680-729. 2022.
    This article provides the first large-scale, longitudinal study examining publication rates by gender in philosophy journals. We find that from 1900 to 1990 the proportion of women authorships in philosophy increased, but it has plateaued since the 1990s. Top Philosophy journals publish the lowest proportion of women, and anonymous review does not increase the proportion publishing in these journals. Value Theory journals do not publish articles by women in proportion to their presence in the su…Read more
  •  147
  •  94
    Sufficiency and the Minimally Good Life
    Utilitas 33 (3): 321-336. 2021.
    What, if anything, do we owe others as a basic minimum? Sufficiency theorists claim that we must provide everyone with enough – but, to date, few well-worked-out accounts of the sufficiency threshold exist, so it is difficult to evaluate this proposition. Previous theories do not provide plausible, independent accounts of resources, capabilities, or welfare that might play the requisite role. Moreover, I believe existing accounts do not provide nearly enough guidance for policymakers. So, this a…Read more
  •  88
    We live in tragic times. Millions are sheltering in place to avoid exacerbating the Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. How should we respond to such tragedies? This paper argues that the human right to health can help us do so because it inspires human rights advocates, claimants, and those with responsibility for fulfilling the right to try hard to satisfy its claims. That is, the right should, and often does, give rise to what I call_ the virtue of creative resolve_. This resolve embodies a fund…Read more
  •  51
    Institutional Theories and International Development
    Global Justice : Theory Practice Rhetoric 7. 2014.
    A recent trend in international development circles is ‘New Institutionalism’. In a slogan, the idea is just that good institutions matter. The slogan itself is so innocuous as to be hardly worth comment. But the push to improve institutional quality has the potential to have a much less innocuous impact on aid efforts and other aspects of international development. This paper provides a critical introduction to some of the literature on institutional quality. It looks, in particular, at an argu…Read more
  •  206
    Good Enough? The Minimally Good Life Account of the Basic Minimum
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 100 (2): 330-341. 2022.
    ABSTRACT What kind of basic minimum do we owe to others? This paper defends a new procedure for answering this question. It argues that its minimally good life account has some advantages over the main alternatives and that neither the first-, nor third-, person perspective can help us to arrive at an adequate account. Rather, it employs the second-person perspective of free, reasonable, care. There might be other conditions for distributive justice, and morality certainly requires more than hel…Read more
  •  94
    Falling From Grace and the Problem of Free Will
    European Journal for Philosophy of Religion 14 (4): 194-216. 2022.
    On the traditional Christian doctrine: 1. People have free will (in Heaven as on Earth). 2. Those with free will can go to Hell. 3. Heaven is eternal. Many Christians also hold: 4. God is all powerful, knowing and good and 5. Free will can justify eternal suffering, evil, or hell. The paper argues that those who accept a version of Christianity that endorses 1–5 face a dilemma: Either deny that free will can justify suffering, evil, or hell or accept that we can fail in heaven and so go to hell.…Read more
  •  57
    Experimental or Empirical Political Philosophy
    In Wesley Buckwalter & Justin Sytsma (eds.), Blackwell Companion to Experimental Philosophy, Blackwell. 2016.
    This chapter reviews the literature on experimental political philosophy. Much of the literature considers individuals’ intuitions about distributive justice, retributive justice, and key concepts such as the doing/allowing distinction. The chapter argues that although there is relatively little experimental political philosophy proper, there are many avenues for future research. It presumes some familiarity with political philosophy, but its main aim is not to explain the relevance of studies t…Read more
  •  125
    How should we measure medicines’ global health impact to set targets, monitor performance and improve health around the world? Can such a metric provide a philosophically well-grounded basis for an ethical consumption campaign that will create incentives for pharmaceutical companies and other agents to expand (equitable) access to essential medicines? And if such metrics exist, how should we think about our individual obligations to support ethical consumption campaigns on this basis? This paper…Read more
  •  93
    Consumption and social change
    Economics and Philosophy 35 (1): 29-47. 2019.
    :How should consumers exercise their basic economic powers? Recently, several authors have argued that consumption to bring about social change must be democratic. Others maintain that we may consume in ways that we believe promote positive change. This paper rejects both accounts and provides a new alternative. It argues that, under just institutions, people may consume as they like as long as they respect the institutions’ rules. Absent just institutions, significant moral constraints on consu…Read more
  •  118
    Against vaccine nationalism
    Journal of Medical Ethics 47 (11): 773-774. 2021.
    While rich countries like the USA and UK are starting to vaccinate their populations against COVID-19, poor countries may lack access to a vaccine for years. A global effort to provide vaccines through the COVAX facility Accelerator) aims to distribute 2 billion vaccinations by the end of next year, but the USA has refused to join and even those rich countries that have joined are entering into bilateral deals with pharmaceutical companies to buy up the supply. Canada, for instance, has already …Read more
  •  48
    Thoughts on Philosophy and the Science of Well-Being
    Res Philosophica 96 (4): 521-528. 2019.
  •  149
    Conserving Nature; Preserving Identity
    with David B. Wong
    Journal of Chinese Philosophy 42 (1-2): 176-196. 2015.
    There are two broad approaches to environmental ethics. The “conservationist” approach on which we should conserve the environment when it is in our interest to do so and the “preservationist” approach on which we should preserve the environment even when it is not in our interest to do so. We propose a new “relational” approach that tells us to preserve nature as part of what makes us who we are or could be. Drawing from Confucian and Daoist texts, we argue that human identities are, or should …Read more