•  20
    Freedom of Movement for All? Toward a More Individualist Relational Equality
    Archiv Für Rechts- Und Sozialphilosophie – Beihefte 179 251-261. 2026.
    In his article, Daniel Sharp developed a relational egalitarian argument against immigration restrictions. In his view, while affluent states’ immigration restrictions against disadvantaged immigrants are morally objectionable because they are an exercise of unequal power, similar restrictions against those from affluent states are not. In this paper, I challenge Sharp’s restrictive treatment of who can make a complaint against immigration restrictions based on relational equality. First, I out…Read more
  •  607
    Defending the Universal Right to Flee Against the Duty to Fight for One’s Nation
    Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie 111 (1): 7-25. 2025.
    Fleeing is an act to which we have attributed different kinds of moral evaluations. It has been associated with virtues such as prudence. At the same time, it has often been seen as a sign of cowardice and irresponsibility. Law in our age sometimes restricts our freedom to flee from danger, even against an individual’s will, as we have all witnessed in the recent war in Ukraine. Here lies the dilemma of the right to flee. Every individual has an interest in fleeing from danger to life and physic…Read more
  •  838
    On the Moral Wrongness of a Male-Only Ban on Leaving One's Homeland
    Philosophy of Law and General Theory of Law 2023 (1): 101-120. 2024.
    The aim of this paper is to examine whether it is morally wrong to ban only male citizens from leaving a country in wartime, and if it is, why it is the case. Following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, President Volodymyr Zelensky declared martial law and ordered general mobilization, at the same time prohibiting male citizens aged 18 to 60 from crossing the border. The justifiability of the ban is in dispute, and opponents have made a case in both legal and moral dimensions. In the moral dimension…Read more
  •  166
    The aim of this article is to consider whether, when, and why it is morally right to treat members of socially disadvantaged racial or ethnic groups favorably when allocating scarce medical resources. Since the COVID 2019 pandemic has had different impacts on racial and ethnic groups, some U.S. states have given racial and ethnic minorities preferential access to COVID-19 vaccines, leading to controversy over the moral and legal permissibility of doing so. I examine three arguments for affirmati…Read more