21.
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
Year >
2000 >
Issue: 10
A question of style (continued)
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22.
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
Year >
2000 >
Issue: 10
A question of style
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23.
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
Year >
2000 >
Issue: 12
Pass the Joint?
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24.
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The Philosophers' Magazine:
Year >
2009 >
Issue: 45
The critics howl
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25.
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Business and Professional Ethics Journal:
Volume >
32 >
Issue: 1/2
William C. Frederick
The CSR Needle in the CR Haystack:
A Review and Commentary of: Corporate Responsibility: The American Experience
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
This review of Corporate Responsibility: The American Experience expands and clarifies the book’s concept of corporate responsibility by emphasizing the centrality of social, moral, and stakeholder dimensions, with special attention given to the emergence of these key ideas in mid-twentieth-century America. These developments are seen as supplements to an otherwise comprehensive discussion of corporate responsibility found in this volume.
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26.
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Social Theory and Practice:
Volume >
36 >
Issue: 3
Kok-Chor Tan
Global Justice and Global Relations
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
In Globalizing Justice, Richard Miller offers a novel understanding of the grounds and scope of the demands of global justice. Miller argues that our duties to the global poor should be conceived relationally, that is, as deriving from the very complex and substantial relationships that we, members of rich countries, have with members of poor countries. In this review essay, I ask whether a relational approach to justice is necessary for the kinds of global duties Miller wishes to advance (that fall short of an egalitarian distributive duty). Indeed, so I argue, the global relations Miller describes go beyond grounding a duty to assist the needy, but are sufficient to generate more substantial global egalitarian obligations.
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27.
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Social Theory and Practice:
Volume >
36 >
Issue: 4
Michael J. Monahan
Liberalism and the Challenge of Race:
Two Views
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
Derrick Darby’s Rights, Race, and Recognition and Ronald R. Sundstrom’s The Browning of America and the Evasion of Social Justice are two recent efforts to answer the challenges that race and racism pose to liberal theory. Darby draws upon civil rights and abolitionist discourse to advance an “externalist” account of political rights, while Sundstrom explores the strains placed upon liberalism by recent demographic trends. In this review essay, I provide a brief account of their overall arguments, and offer some further critical considerations.
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28.
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Social Theory and Practice:
Volume >
38 >
Issue: 4
Jeffrey Reiman
The Structure of Structural Injustice:
Thoughts on Iris Marion Young’s Responsibility for Justice
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29.
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Social Theory and Practice:
Volume >
39 >
Issue: 2
Robert Kane
Searching for Wisdom About the Good in Theory and Practice:
A Response to Metz
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30.
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Social Theory and Practice:
Volume >
39 >
Issue: 2
Meira Levinson
Tacking Toward Justice
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31.
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Social Theory and Practice:
Volume >
39 >
Issue: 2
Thaddeus Metz
“The Meaning of Life Lies in the Search”:
Robert Kane’s New Justification of Objective Values
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32.
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Social Theory and Practice:
Volume >
39 >
Issue: 2
M. Victoria Costa
Justice as Fairness and Educational Policy:
A Response to Levinson
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33.
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Social Theory and Practice:
Volume >
39 >
Issue: 4
Matthew Oliver
Freedom on the People’s Terms:
The Problem of Democratic Domination
abstract |
view |
rights & permissions
In On The People’s Terms: A Republican Theory and Model of Democracy, Philip Pettit offers a conception of freedom as non-domination that is, he claims, compromised by any regime other than democracy, yet is fully compatible with coercion by a suitably democratic state. However, as I argue, Pettit has difficulty trying to deliver the latter half of this promise. This essay offers an analysis of Pettit’s definition of freedom as non-domination, specifically, his approach to invasion and controlled interference, demonstrating that it is incapable of doing the work he wants it to do. I argue that he ought to surrender not his definition, but rather the claim that a democratic government can avoid compromising the freedom of its citizens.
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34.
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Social Theory and Practice:
Volume >
26 >
Issue: 1
Torin Alter
On Racist Symbols and Reparations
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35.
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Social Theory and Practice:
Volume >
28 >
Issue: 1
Margaret Gilbert
Collective Wrongdoing:
Moral and Legal Responses
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36.
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Social Theory and Practice:
Volume >
6 >
Issue: 1
Thomas R. Flynn
Review Article:
Another Sartrean Torso: Critique of Dialectical Reason
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37.
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Social Theory and Practice:
Volume >
29 >
Issue: 4
Michelle Renee Matisons
Feminism and Multiculturalism:
The Dialogue Continues
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38.
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Social Theory and Practice:
Volume >
29 >
Issue: 4
Richard Schmitt
Living With Evil
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39.
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Social Theory and Practice:
Volume >
30 >
Issue: 1
Kenneth Shockley
Thinking Through Collectives:
Graham and McMahon on the Influence of Membership on Practical Reason
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40.
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Social Theory and Practice:
Volume >
30 >
Issue: 2
Kathryn Norlock
The Case for our Widespread Dependency
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