•  42
    Noncompliance and the Demands of Public Reason
    Journal of Political Philosophy 32 (1-4): 56-76. 2025.
  •  129
    The Egalitarian Theory of the Duty to Vote
    Oxford Studies in Political Philosophy. forthcoming.
    Critics often argue that there cannot be a moral duty to vote because whatever reason there is to vote can be satisfied in other ways. This chapter develops a novel theory of the duty to vote—which the authors call the egalitarian theory—that responds to this challenge. The egalitarian theory grounds the duty to vote in the unfolding demands of treating others as equals in the pursuit of justice. Whatever private actions individuals perform to help some subset of individuals in need, they have a…Read more
  •  89
    Mandate Reasons and the Ethics of Representation
    Political Philosophy 2 (1): 238-261. 2025.
    Democratic theorists have developed a rich literature exploring why winning democratic elections gives representatives the moral right to occupy public office. However, they have largely ignored the question of whether receiving greater or lesser voter support ever makes a moral difference to how representatives ought to govern. In this essay, I defend the existence of mandate reasons for representatives to govern in specific ways that are derived solely from voter support. I argue that the rela…Read more
  •  104
    Democracy
    Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy. 2022.
  •  198
    Noncompliance and the Demands of Public Reason
    Journal of Political Philosophy 32 (1-4): 56-76. 2024.
    Journal of Political Philosophy, EarlyView.
  •  167
    Consenting Under Coercion: The Partial Validity Account
    Philosophical Quarterly 74 (3): 709-731. 2023.
    How is the validity of our consent, and others’ moral permission to act on our consent affected by coercion? Everyone agrees that in cases of two-party coercion—when X coerces Y to do something with or for X—the consent of the coerced is invalid, and the coercer is not permitted to act upon the consent they receive. But coercers and the recipients of consent are not always identical. Sometimes a victim, Y, agrees to do something to, with, or for Z because they are being coerced by X. Recently, s…Read more
  •  131
    Deliberative Democracy
    In Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen, Kimberley Brownlee & David Coady (eds.), A Companion to Applied Philosophy, Wiley-blackwell. 2016.
    The theory of deliberative democracy is a field of democratic theory that studies the contribution of public discussion, argumentation, and reasoning to the normative justification of democratic decision‐making. In this essay, we first explore two competing visions of the moral ideal of deliberative democracy: the rational consensus conception and the wide conception. This establishes a normative framework for analyzing several important applied issues that arise in thinking about deliberative d…Read more
  •  1375
    Noumenal Power, Reasons, and Justification : A Critique of Forst
    with Enzo Rossi
    In Ester Herlin-Karnell & Matthias Klatt (eds.), Constitutionalism Justified: Rainer Forst in Discourse, Oxford University Press, Usa. 2019.
    In this essay we criticise Rainer Forst's attempt to draw a connection between power and justification, and thus ground his normative theory of a right to justification. Forst draws this connection primarily conceptually, though we will also consider whether a normative connection may be drawn within his framework. Forst's key insight is that if we understand power as operating by furnishing those subjected to it with reasons, then we create a space for the normative contestation of any exercise…Read more
  •  197
    The weight of fairness
    Politics, Philosophy and Economics 18 (4): 386-402. 2019.
    Many philosophers argue that individuals have duties to do their fair shares of the demands of achieving important common ends. But what happens when some individuals fail to do their fair shares?...
  •  251
    Self-defeat and the foundations of public reason
    Philosophical Studies 174 (12): 3133-3151. 2017.
    At the core of public reason liberalism is the idea that the exercise of political power is legitimate only if based on laws or political rules that are justifiable to all reasonable citizens. Call this the Public Justification Principle. Public reason liberals face the persistent objection that the Public Justification Principle is self-defeating. The idea that a society’s political rules must be justifiable to all reasonable citizens is intensely controversial among seemingly reasonable citize…Read more