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23Teaching to transgress through residential education: Nurturing pedagogical innovation to tackle the climate and nature emergencies in higher educationJournal of Moral Education 54 (1): 119-132. 2025.ABSTRACT Universities occupy a contested space regarding their responses to the climate and nature emergencies. They are criticised for their neoliberalism, marketisation and corporatism yet they provide education to the leaders of tomorrow who are essential for the transition to a sustainable world. In this paper, residential education is explored through a three-phase Rites of Passage framework based on teaching to transgress. Dependable and trustworthy literature sources were identified to de…Read more
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259Immigration JusticeEdinburgh University Press. 2013.What moral standards ought nation-states abide by when selecting immigration policies? Peter Higgins argues that immigration policies can only be judged by considering the inequalities that are produced by the institutions - such as gender, race and class - that constitute our social world.Higgins challenges conventional positions on immigration justice, including the view that states have a right to choose whatever immigration policies they like, or that all immigration restrictions ought to be…Read more
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76Migration Justice and LegitimacyRes Publica 28 (3): 425-433. 2022.In order for a state to rightfully exercise self-determination by means of setting policies concerning migrants and migration, they must be legitimate, Gillian Brock argues in _Justice for People on the Move_. Legitimacy, in Brock’s view, requires that states satisfy three (jointly sufficient) conditions: they must respect their own citizens’ human rights; they must be a part of a legitimate state system; and they must adequately contribute to the maintenance of this state system. In her new boo…Read more
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143Covering and the moral duty to resist oppressionCritical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 24 (7): 1068-1075. 2021.Do LGBT+ persons have a moral duty of some form to resist heterosexist oppression by refusing to “cover” (i.e., “to ‘disattend,’ or tone down, their (despised) sexuality in an effort to fit into and be accepted by the mainstream” (Ghosh 2018, 273))? Writing in response to Kenji Yoshino (Yoshino 2002 and 2006), Cyril Ghosh argues that such a duty would itself be oppressive. In this reply to Ghosh’s new book, I wish to argue that while Ghosh demonstrates that Yoshino’s critique of covering suffers…Read more
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42Unjust Borders: Individuals and the Ethics of Immigration, Javier S. Hidalgo , 214 pp., $140 cloth, $54.95 eBookEthics and International Affairs 33 (4): 511-513. 2019.
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186Three Hypotheses for Explaining the So-Called Oppression of MenFeminist Philosophy Quarterly 5 (2). 2019.Are men oppressed as men? The evidence given in support of affirmative responses to this question usually consists in examples of harms, limitations, or requirements masculinity imposes on men: men are expected to pay on dates, men must be breadwinners for their families, men can be drafted for war, and so forth. This article explicates three hypotheses that account for the harms, limitations, and requirements masculinity imposes on men and, drawing on the work of Alison Jaggar, seeks to show th…Read more
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155The rights and duties of immigrants in liberal societiesPhilosophy Compass 13 (11). 2018.What legal rights and duties immigrants should have is among the most ferociously debated topics in the politics of liberal societies today. However, as this article will show, there is remarkably little disagreement of great magnitude among political theorists and philosophers of immigration on the rights and duties of resident immigrants (even in contrast to the closely related philosophical discussion of justice in immigrant admissions). Specifically, this article will survey philosophical po…Read more
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79A Feminist Approach to Immigrant AdmissionsHypatia 32 (3): 506-522. 2017.Answers to the question of immigrant admissions have been debated extensively by political philosophers since the 1980s. A wide variety of normative approaches to the question have been taken, but very nearly zero have been expressly feminist. Generalizing from Alison Jaggar's articulation of a feminist methodological approach to the political morality of abortion, this article proposes a feminist methodological approach to immigrant admissions. This article does not defend a substantive view on…Read more
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83Review of Gillian Brock and Michael I. Blake: Debating Brain Drain: May Governments Restrict Emigration? (review)Ethics 126 (4): 1095-1100. 2016.
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Review of Benhabib, Seyla: The Rights of Others: Aliens, Residents, and Citizens (Cambridge University Press, 2004) (review)Human Rights Review 8 (2): 133-135. 2007.
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1306The Ethics of Immigration and the Justice of Immigration PoliciesPublic Affairs Quarterly 29 (2): 155-174. 2015.A large portion of normative philosophical thought on immigration seeks to address the question “What policies for admitting and excluding foreigners may states justly adopt?” This question places normative philosophical discussions of immigration within the boundaries of political philosophy, whose concern is the moral assessment of social institutions. Several recent contributions to normative philosophical thought on immigration propose to answer this question, but adopt methods of reasoning …Read more
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120Immigration JusticeSocial Philosophy Today 25 149-162. 2009.This paper is addressed to those who hold that states’ immigration policies are subject to cosmopolitan principles of justice. I have a very limited goal in the paper, and that is to offer a condensed explication of a principle for determining whether states’ immigration policies are just. That principle is that just immigration policies may not avoidably harm disadvantaged social groups (whether domestic or foreign). This principle is inspired by the failure, among many extant cosmopolitan prop…Read more
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Review of Gould, Carol: Globalizing Democracy and Human Rights (Cambridge University Press, 2006) (review)Human Rights Review 7 (4): 117-119. 2006.
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1115What is Poverty?In Rebecca Whisnant & Peggy DesAutels (eds.), Global Feminist Ethics: Feminist Ethics and Social Theory, Rowman & Littlefield. 2008.Invoking three desiderata (empirical adequacy, conceptual precision, and sensitivity to social positioning), this paper argues that poverty is best understood as the deprivation of certain human capabilities. It defends this way of conceiving of poverty against standard alternatives: lack of income, lack of resources, inequality, and social exclusion.
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58Open Borders and the Right to Immigration: Response to Richard Nunan’s CommentsHuman Rights Review 9 (4): 543-544. 2008.
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2Review of Witt, Charlotte: The Metaphysics of Gender (Oxford University Press, 2011) (review)Apa Newsletter on Feminism and Philosophy 12 (1): 19-21. 2012.
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82Ari Kohen, In Defense of Human Rights: A Non-religious Grounding in a Pluralistic World: Taylor & Francis, Inc., Routledge, UK, 2007 (review)Human Rights Review 10 (2): 291-293. 2009.
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3283Open Borders and the Right to ImmigrationHuman Rights Review 9 (4): 525-535. 2008.This paper argues that the relevant unit of analysis for assessing the justice of an immigration policy is the socially-situated individual (as opposed to the individual simpliciter or the nation-state, for example). This methodological principle is demonstrated indirectly by showing how some liberal, cosmopolitan defenses of "open borders" and the alleged right of immigration fail by their own standards, owing to the implicit adoption of an inappropriate unit of analysis.
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61The Ethics of Immigration, by Joseph H. Carens (review)Teaching Philosophy 39 (3): 363-367. 2016.
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1083Sexual Disorientation: Moral implications of gender normsIn Lisa Nicole Gurley, Claudia Leeb & Anna Aloisia Moser (eds.), Feminists Contest Politics and Philosophy: Selected Papers of the 3rd Interdisciplinary Conference Celebrating International Women's Day, Pie - Peter Lang. 2005.This paper argues that participating exclusively or predominantly in heterosexual romantic or sexual relationships is prima facie morally impermissible. It holds that this conclusion follows from three premises: (1) gender norms are on-balance harmful; (2) conforming to harmful social norms is prima facie morally impermissible; and (3) participating exclusively or predominantly in heterosexual romantic or sexual relationships is a way of conforming to gender norms.
Ypsilanti, Michigan, United States of America
Areas of Specialization
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| Philosophy of Gender, Race, and Sexuality |