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16From Civic Virtue to the Informal SphereIn Jörg Althammer, Bernhard Neumärker & Ursula Nothelle-Wildfeuer (eds.), Solidarity in Open Societies, Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden. pp. 79-101. 2019.Democratic governance—whether within or beyond national borders—depends not just on robust formal institutions, but also on the existence of some form of solidarity outside of them. Philosophers have developed two methodological tendencies in analyzing extra-institutional life: individualistic civic virtue approaches and more holistic informal sphere approaches. Understanding democratic solidarity in terms of civic virtue is inadequate for modern, complex societies, however. Rather than putting …Read more
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Human rights solidarity : moral or political?In Reidar Maliks & Johan Karlsson Schaffer (eds.), Moral and Political Conceptions of Human Rights: Implications for Theory and Practice, Cambridge University Press. 2017.
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50Mass Deliberative Democracy and Criminal Justice ReformPhilosophy in the Contemporary World 27 (1): 68-102. 2021.The American criminal justice system falls far short of democratic ideals. In response, democratic communitarian localism proposes a more decentralized system with a greater emphasis on local control. This approach aims to deconcentrate power and remove bureaucracy, arguing local control would reflect informal cultural life better than our current system. This view fails to adequately address localized domination, however, including in the background culture of society. As a result, it underplay…Read more
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41Recovering the Concept of “Forms of Life” for Social Philosophy and Critical TheorySocial Philosophy Today 36 197-200. 2020.
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106Interpreting the Situation of Political Disagreement: Rancière and HabermasJournal of French and Francophone Philosophy 27 (2): 8-31. 2019.Although Jacques Rancière and Jürgen Habermas share several important commitments, they interpret various core concepts differently, viewing politics, democracy, communication, and disagreement in conflicting ways. Rancière articulates his democratic vision in opposition to important elements of Habermas’s approach. Critics contend that Habermas cannot account for the dynamics of command, exclusion, resistance, and aesthetic transformation involved in Rancière’s understanding of politics. In par…Read more
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1155Resolving the Dilemma of Democratic Informal PoliticsSocial Theory and Practice 43 (4). 2017.The way citizens regard and treat one another in everyday life, even when they are not engaged in straightforwardly “political” activities, matters for achieving democratic ideals. This claim provokes an underexamined unease in many. Here I articulate these concerns, which I argue are prompted by the approaches most often associated with these issues. Such theories, like democratic communitarianism, require problematic sorts of unity in everyday social life. To avoid these difficulties, I offer …Read more
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79Beyond the Numbers: Toward a Moral Vision for Criminal Justice ReformDrake Law Review Discourse 101-110. 2015.The diverse coalition of activists trying to cut the prison population has thus far failed to articulate a coherent moral foundation for criminal justice reform. Since the various constituents of this coalition support reform for different reasons, it may seem savvy to avoid conversation about moral questions. We argue, however, that failing to work toward developing a moral basis for reform puts the coalition at risk of repeating the failures of the sentencing reform movement of the 1970s and 1…Read more
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53Republicanism, Democratic Participation, and Unelected AuthorityPhilosophy and Public Issues - Filosofia E Questioni Pubbliche 5 (2). 2015.Download.