•  74
    The Irony of Environmentalism: The Ecological Futility but Political Necessity of Lifestyle Change
    with John Willoughby
    Ethics and International Affairs 19 (3): 77-89. 2005.
    Environmentalists argue that we need to reduce population and consumption to protect the environment, and that this is something we can all do by individually choosing to have smaller families and buying fewer products. This article questions the ecological impact of such choice.
  •  34
    A Perfect Moral Storm: The Ethical Tragedy Of Climate Change (review)
    Ethics and International Affairs 27 (4): 462-464. 2013.
  •  18
    Ethical Enhancement in an Age of Climate Change
    Ethics and International Affairs 28 (3): 325-334. 2014.
    This roundtable of Ethics & International Affairs provides an opportunity to step back and reflect on the fundamental elements of climate change and how ethics can play a role in addressing them. In this spirit, I explore three questions that capture the broad outlines of climate concerns. First, what is the nature of climate change as a global problem? Second, what frustrates humanity's ability to respond? Third, what can be done?
  •  5
    Principled World Politics: The Challenge of Normative International Relations
    with Lester Edwin J. Ruiz and Richard A. Falk
    Rowman & Littlefield. 2000.
    On normative international relations.
  •  3
    Nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) both lobby states and work within and across societies to advance their interests. These latter efforts are generally ignored by students of world politics because they do not directly involve governments. A study of transnational environmental activist groups (TEAGs) such as Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, and World Wildlife Fund demonstrates that NGO societal efforts indeed shape widespread behavior throughout the world. TEAGs work through transnational s…Read more