- Shared Standards Versus Competitive Pressures in Journalism
- Who Should Bear the Risk When Self‐Driving Vehicles Crash?
- Introduction: Symposium on Acceptable and Unacceptable Criteria for Prioritizing Among Refugees in a Nonideal World
- Consultation, Consent, and the Silencing of Indigenous Communities
- Conspiracy Theories, Quassim Cassam, 2019. Cambridge, Polity Press, vii + 127 pp, USD45 (hb) USD12.95 (pb)
- Strategic Indeterminacy in the Law, David Lanius, 2019. Oxford, Oxford University Press. xviii + 331 pp, £64.00 (hb)
- Moral Extremism
- Should Slavery’s Statues Be Preserved? On Transitional Justice and Contested Heritage
- A Practice‐Focused Case for Animal Moral Agency
- Liability for Wrongful Assistance: On Causing Unjust Harm in the Course of Suboptimal Rescue
- Selling Arms and Expressing Harm
- Assisting Rebels Abroad: The Ethics of Violence at the Limits of the Defensive Paradigm
- Risk and Fear: Restricting Science under Uncertainty
- What Makes an Attack Sexual?
- Introduction: Symposium on The Ethics of Indirect Intervention
- How Much Does Slaughter Harm Humanely Raised Animals?1
- Who Is Responsible for Killer Robots? Autonomous Weapons, Group Agency, and the Military‐Industrial Complex
- Epistemic Paternalism: Conceptions, Justifications and Implications. Edited by A. Bernal and G. Axtell, 2020, London, Rowman & Littlefield International. 332 pp, £92.00 (hb)
- Epistemic Paternalism: Conceptions, Justifications and Implications. Edited by A. Bernal and G. Axtell, 2020, London, Rowman & Littlefield International. 332 pp, £92.00 (hb)
- Ethics, Security, and the War Machine: The True Cost of the MilitaryN. Dobos, 2020 Oxford Oxford University Press ix 184 pp, £45 (hb)
- The Irrevocability of Capital Punishment and Active Voluntary Euthanasia1
- Asexuality
- Failing Institutions, Whistle‐Blowing, and the Role of the News Media
- Cultural Heritage, Genocide, and Normative Agency
- Commemorating Public Figures – In Favour of a Fictionalist Position
- Does Social Trust Justify the Public Justification Principle?
- A Critique of the Neurodiversity View
- Knowing Our Limits Nathan Ballantyne New York, Oxford University Press xiv + 326 pp. £25.99 (hb)
- Mother Knows Best: Pregnancy, Applied Ethics, and Epistemically Transformative Experiences
- Respect, Religion, and Feminism: Comments on Lori Watson and Christie Hartley, Equal Citizenship and Public Reason: A Feminist Political Liberalism
- Substantive Equality and Equal Citizenship1
- On Equal Citizenship and Public Reason: Reply to Critics
- Equal Citizenship and Convergence
- Reasonable Disagreement About, and Within, Watson and Hartley’s Political Liberalism
- Political Liberalism and Male Supremacy
- Why We Should Avoid Artists Who Cause Harm: Support as Enabling Harm
- Painlessly Killing Predators
- The Trust‐Based Communicative Obligations of Expert Authorities
- Cognitive Enhancement and the Value of Cognitive Achievement
- Psychiatric Euthanasia and the Ontology of Mental Disorder
- Why Buy Local?
- Justice, Migration & Mercy. Michael Blake, 2020, Oxford, Oxford University Press, ix+266 £22.99 (hb)
- Justice, Migration & Mercy. Michael Blake, 2020, Oxford, Oxford University Press, ix+266 £22.99 (hb)
- Refugee Discrimination – The Good, the Bad, and the Pragmatic
- Gamete Donation, the Responsibility Objection, and Procreative Responsibilities
- Punishing Noncitizens
- Neuroethics, Justice and Autonomy: Public Reason in the Cognitive Enhancement Debate, Veljko Dubljević, 2019 Cham, Springer Nature Switzerland xv + 138 pp., £70.00 (hb)
- Introduction: Symposium on Causation in War
- Clean Hands? Philosophical Lessons from Scrupulosity. Jesse S. Summers and Walter Sinnott‐Armstrong, 2019. New York, Oxford University Press. xii 202pp, $74 (hb)
- Being Ecological. Timothy Morton, 2018 Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press. Xlii 172 pp, $15.95 (hb/pb)
- The Epistemic Basic Structure
- Strategic Indeterminacy in the Law, D. Lanius, 2019. Oxford, Oxford University Press. xviii + 331 pp, £64.00 (hb)
- Labour‐Based Justifications of Intellectual Property and the Problem of Disruptive Innovations
- Keeping Out Extremists: Refugees, Would‐Be Immigrants, and Ideological Exclusion
- Sufficiency, Priority, and Selecting Refugees
- Consultation, consent, and the silencing of Indigenous communities
- Bias in Context: An Introduction to the Symposium
- Implicit Bias, (Global) White Ignorance, and Bad Faith: The Problem of Whiteness and Anti‐black Racism
- Automation and Utopia: Human Flourishing in a World without Work John Danaher, 2019 Cambridge, MA and London, England Harvard University Press. 336pp, $39.95 • £31.95 • €36.00
- No Blame No Gain? From a No Blame Culture to a Responsibility Culture in Medicine
- Animal Labour. A New Frontier of Interspecies Justice? Charlotte E. Blattner, Kendra Coulter, and Will Kymlicka (eds), 2019. Oxford, Oxford University Press. 256pp, £65 (hb)
- Bad Faith, Bad Behaviour, and Role Models
- Poverty and the Peril of Particulars
- Introduction: Symposium on War and Causation
- Structural Injustice and Massively Shared Obligations
- Extrapolating from Laboratory Behavioral Research on Nonhuman Primates Is Unjustified
- What’s Wrong with the Online Echo Chamber: A Motivated Reasoning Account
- Accountability and Community on the Internet: A Plea for Restorative Justice
- Commemoration and Emotional Imperialism
- Conspiracy Theories, Q Cassam, 2019. Cambridge, Polity Press, vii + 127 pp, USD45 (hb) USD12.95 (pb)
- The Unfair Burdens Argument Against Carbon Pricing
- Bias in Context: Psychological and Structural Explanations of Injustice
- The Importance of History to the Erasing‐history defence
- Academic Activism Revisited
- The Meaning of Life and Death: Ten Classic Thinkers on the Ultimate Question, Michael Hauskeller, 2020. London, Bloomsbury Academic. xv + 236 pp. £ 45.50 (hb) £ 13.99 (pb)
- Value Commitment, Resolute Choice, and the Normative Foundations of Behavioural Welfare Economics
- Being Ecological. Timothy Morton, 2018 Cambridge, Massachusetts: The MIT Press. Xlii 172 pp, $15.95 (hb/pb)
- Group Duties: Their Existence and Their Implications for Individuals, Stephanie Collins, 2019. Oxford, Oxford University Press. x 218 pp, £50.00 (hb)
- Settler‐State Borders and the Question of Indigenous Immigrant Identity
- Morality, Perspective, and Fantasy: A Comment on Sarah Buss
- Some Musings About the Limits of an Ethics That Can Be Applied – A Response to a Question About Courage and Convictions That Confronted the Author When She Woke Up on November 9, 2016
- A Question of Obligation
- Self‐Love and Its Forms
- Socrates and the Ethic of Resistance: Comments on Buss
- Clean Hands? Philosophical Lessons from scrupulosity. Jesse S. Summers and Walter Sinnott‐Armstrong, 2019. New York, Oxford University Press. xii 202pp, $74 (hb)
- The Road to Somewhere: The Populist Revolt and the Future of Politics, D. Goodhart, 2017 Hurst & Company, London, vi + 278 pp. £20.00 (hb)
- The Routledge Handbook of the Philosophy of Childhood and Children Anca Gheaus, Gideon Calder, & Jurger De Wispelaere, 2019 Abingdon, UK. Routledge xv + 424 pp, £175 (hb) £20 (e‐book)
- Caring and the Prison in Philosophy, Policy and Practice: Under Lock and Key
- The Capitalist Cage: Structural Domination and Collective Agency in the Market
- A Defence of Pharmaceutical Paternalism
- The Ethics of Citizen Selection of Refugees for Admission and Resettlement
- Neuroethics, Justice and Autonomy: Public Reason in the Cognitive Enhancement Debate, Veljko Dubljević, 2020 Cham, Springer Nature Switzerland xv + 138 pp., £70.00 (hb)
- Intentional (nation‐)States: A Group‐Agency Problem for the State’s Right to Exclude
- Exploitation and Remedial Duties
- Barbarous Spectacle and General Massacre: A Defence of Gory Fictions
- The Routledge Handbook of Applied Epistemology, David Coady, James Chase, 2019 New York, Routledge xi + 344 pp, 220$ USD (hb)
- How Many Parents Should There Be in a Family?
- Rethinking Same‐Sex Sex in Natural Law Theory
- The Human Right to Free Internet Access
- What the State Owes ‘Bastards’: A Modest Critique of Modest One‐Child Policies
- The Routledge Handbook of the Philosophy of Childhood and Children Anca Gheaus, Gideon Calder, & Jurger De Wispelaere, 2019 Abingdon, UK. Routledge xv + 424 pp, £175 (hb) £20 (e‐book)
- Reclaiming the System: Moral Responsibility, Divided Labour, and the Role of Organisations in Society L. Herzog, 2018 Oxford, Oxford University Press. xi 312 pp
- Consequentialism, Animal Ethics, and the Value of Valuing
- On a Promise or on the Game: What’s Wrong with Selling Consent?
- The Free Speech Century Lee C. Bollinger & Geoffrey R. Stone, 2018 New York, Oxford University Press. xvi + 356 pp, $99.00 (hb) $21.95 (pb)
- Privileged Groups and Obligation: Engineering Bad Concepts
- An Argument for Compulsory Vaccination: The Taxation Analogy
- Inheritance and the Family
- Animal Vulnerability and its Ethical Implications: An Exploration
- War Crimes: Causes, Excuses, and Blame Matthew Talbert & Jessica Wolfendale New York, Oxford University Press, 2019 x + 168 pp, $74.00 (hb)
- Equality Beyond Needs‐Satisfaction: An Empirical Investigation
- Exemptions, Sincerity and Pastafarianism
- Implicit Bias (Global) White Ignorance, and Bad Faith: The Problem of Whiteness and Anti‐black Racism
- Carefreeness and Children’s Wellbeing
- Getting Obligations Right: Autonomy and Shared Decision Making
- The Right to Privacy, Control Over Self‐Presentation, and Subsequent Harm
- Cities and Immigration: Political and Moral Dilemmas in the New Era of Migration Avner De‐Shalit, 2018 Oxford: Oxford University Press. viii + 168 pp, £60 (hb)
- Environmental Ethics: A Very Short Introduction Robin Attfield, 2018 Oxford: Oxford University Press, Xvii 137 pp, $11.95 (pb)
- Dead People and the All‐Affected Principle
- Penal Disenfranchisement and Equality of Status
- The Road to Somewhere: The Populist Revolt and the Future of Politics, D. Goodhart, 2017 Hurst & Company, London, vi + 278 pp. £20.00 (hb)
- Punishment for Mob‐based Harms: Expressing and Denouncing Mob Mentality
- Editing the Reactive Genome: Towards a Postgenomic Ethics of Germline Editing
- Causal Contribution in War
- Causation and Liability to Defensive Harm
- More of a Cause?
- Democratic Control of Information in the Age of Surveillance Capitalism
- How Democracy Can Inform Consent: Cases of the Internet and Bioethics
- Democracy and/or Consent: A Comment on Carol Gould’s ‘How Democracy Can Inform Consent’
- Deliberative Democracy and the Use of Data for Public Health: Comments on Gould
- Democracy as Uninformed Non‐Consent
- Conversation from Beyond the Grave? A Neo‐Confucian Ethics of Chatbots of the Dead
- Political Activism and Research Ethics
- Frontotemporal Dementia and the Reactive Attitudes: Two Roles for the Capacity to Care?
- Sufficiency and Satiable Values
- Towards a Theory of Pure Procedural Climate Justice
- Assisting Wild Animals Vulnerable to Climate Change: Why Ethical Strategies Diverge
- Integration, Community, and the Medical Model of Social Injustice
- A Duty to Resist: When Disobedience Should Be Uncivil Candice Delmas, 2018 NewYork: Oxford University Press ix + 295 pp, £19.99 (hb)
- Defending Biodiversity: Environmental Science and Ethics Jonathan A.Newman, Gary Varner and Stefan Linquist, 2017 Cambridge and New York: Cambridge University Press, xiv + 441 p.; £36.99 (pb)
- Liberalism’s Religion and Laborde’s Integrity
- Electoral Quid Pro Quo: A Defence of Barter Markets in Votes
- Intelligibility, Moral Loss and Injustice
- Minding the Gap: Bias, Soft Structures, and the Double Life of Social Norms
- Irrelevant Cultural Influences on Belief
- The Duties of Political Officials in a Minimally Secular State
- Delusions and Personal Autonomy
- Language, Liberalism and the Critical Religion Challenge
- Do We Need Integrity in a Theory of Justice? A Critique of the ‘Argument from Integrity’ in Favour of Accommodations
- The Slippery Slope Argument against Geoengineering Research
- May Churches Discriminate?
- Rights to the Oceans: Foundational Arguments Reconsidered
- Rawlsian Justice and the Social Determinants of Health
- Online Masquerade: Redesigning the Internet for Free Speech Through the Use of Pseudonyms
- Why Does Inequality Matter? T. M. Scanlon, 2018 New York: Oxford University Press ix + 192 pp., £18.99 (hb)
- Denying Services to Prevent Regret
- Nobody Puts Baby in the Container: The Foetal Container Model at Work in Medicine and Commercial Surrogacy
- Adapting to Climate Change: What We Owe to Other Animals
- The Social Creation of Morality and Complicity in Collective Harms: A Kantian Account
- Pharmaceutical Freedom: Why Patients have a Right to Self‐Medicate Jessica Flanigan, 2017 New York: Oxford University Press 288 pp, £25.99 (hb)
- Intellectual Perfectionism about Schooling
- Cosmopolitanism, Occupancy and Political Self‐Determination
- Deep Disagreement, the Dark Enlightenment, and the Rhetoric of the Red Pill
- Remembering War: Fabre on Remembrance
- Complicity and Conditions of Agency
- Peace, Self‐Determination and Reckoning with the Past: A Reply to Butt, Lippert‐Rasmussen, Pasternak, Wellman and Stemplowska
- Are Healthy Eating Policies Consistent with Public Reason?
- Benefits, Entitlements and Non‐Responsible Threats
- Cosmopolitan Justice and Criminal States
- Restitution Post Bellum: Property, Inheritance, and Corrective Justice
- Getting it Right about Parenthood
- Frantz Fanon, Psychiatry and Politics Nigel C. Gibson & Roberto Beneduce, 2017 London: Rowman & Littlefield International 322 pp, £80 (hb), £24.99 (ebook)
- Frantz Fanon, Psychiatry and Politics Nigel C. Gibson & Roberto Beneduce, 2017 London: Rowman & Littlefield International 322 pp, £80 (hb), £24.99 (ebook)
- Commercial Boycotting and Conscientious Breach of Contract
- Exploitation, Working Poverty, and the Expressive Power of Wages
- Partial Loss of Territory Due to Anthropogenic Climate Change: A Theory of Compensating for Losses in Political Self‐determination
- Phenomenology of Illness H. Carel, 2016 Oxford, Oxford University Press xi + 248 pp, $50.00 (hb)
- The Moral Economy: Why Good Incentives are No Substitute for Good Citizens S. Bowles, 2016 New Haven CT, Yale University Press xvi 272 pp, $27,50 (hb) $20,00 (pb)
- Just Annexation
- Historical Emissions and the Carbon Budget
- False Double Consciousness: Hermeneutical Resources from the Rush Limbaugh Show
- Resolving the Tensions Between White People’s Active Investment in Racial Inequality and White Ignorance: A Response to Marzia Milazzo
- Dissidents and Innocents: Hard Cases for a Political Philosophy of Boycotts
- Taking the Love Pill: A Reply to Naar and Nyholm
- On Pettit’s ‘Three Mistakes about Doing Good (and Bad)’
- The Good/Bad Asymmetry
- Not Quite Non-Consequentialism: The Implications of Pettit’s ‘Three Mistakes about Doing Good (and Bad)’ for Metaphysics and Moral Philosophy
- Three Mistakes about Doing Good (and Bad)
- Toward a More Adequate Consequentialism
- The Ethics of Boycotting as Collective Anti‐Normalisation
- The Ethics of Boycotting as Collective Anti-Normalisation
- Consumer Boycotts as Instruments for Structural Change
- Bodily Violence, Agency, and Animals
- A Rawlsian Case for Economic Nationalism: Globalisation and Distributional Autonomy in the Law of Peoples
- Kant and Degrees of Responsibility
- In Defence of Backyard Chickens
- The Case for Markets in Citizenship
- Corporate Responsibilization
- Asylum for Sale: A Market between States that is Feasible and Desirable
- Ethics and the Endangerment of Children’s Bodies G. Graf & G. Schweiger Basingstoke, Palgrave MacMillan xix 283 pp, £55.99 (e‐book) £66.99 (hb)
- Ethics and the Endangerment of Children’s Bodies G. Graf & G. Schweiger Basingstoke, Palgrave MacMillan xix 283 pp, £55.99 (e-book) £66.99 (hb)
- Kagan on Speciesism and Modal Personism
- Liberalism, Civil Marriage, and Amorous Caregiving Dyads
- Strangers in Our Midst: The Political Philosophy of Immigration D. Miller, 2016 Cambridge MA, Harvard University Press 240 pp., £27.95 (hb)
- Introduction: Symposium on The Nature and Value of Childhood
- Equal Opportunity and the Family: Levelling Up the Brighouse-Swift Thesis
- Equal Opportunity and the Family: Levelling Up the Brighouse‐Swift Thesis
- The Taste Question in Animal Ethics
- Aha! The Moments of Insight that Shape Our World W. Irvine, 2015 New York: Oxford University Press, 2015 Xii + 362 pp. £16.99 (hb)
- No Such Thing as Killer Robots
- Beneficence: Does Agglomeration Matter?
- On the Strength of Children’s Right to Bodily Integrity: The Case of Circumcision
- Against Pay Secrecy
- Kidnapped: The Ethics of Paying Ransoms
- Forgetting in Immortality
- Parental Education and Expensive Consumption Habits
- Replies
- Regret and Affirmation
- The Devout and the Disabled: Religious and Cultural Accommodation-as-Human-Variation
- The Devout and the Disabled: Religious and Cultural Accommodation‐as‐Human‐Variation
- Critical Philosophy of Race: Beyond the USA
- The Challenge of Authenticity: Enhancement and Accurate Self‐Presentation
- The Challenge of Authenticity: Enhancement and Accurate Self-Presentation
- Natural Duties of Justice in a World of States
- Ageing and Terminal Illness: Problems for Rawlsian Justice
- Children’s Vulnerability and Legitimate Authority Over Children
- Why Childhood is Bad for Children
- The Ethics of Embryonic Stem Cell Research Katrien Devolder, 2015 Oxford, Oxford University Press 167 pp., £30 (hb)
- Epistemic Privilege and Victims’ Duties to Resist their Oppression
- Education, Sufficiency, and the Relational Egalitarian Ideal
- On the Complementarity of the Ages of Life
- The Problem of Predation in Zoopolis
- The Ethics of Germline Gene Editing
- Climate Change, No‐Harm Principle, and Moral Responsibility of Individual Emitters
- Climate Change, No-Harm Principle, and Moral Responsibility of Individual Emitters
- La Révolution est un bloc? Wallace on Affirmation and Regret
- Autonomy, Respect, and the Rights of Persons with Disabilities in Crisis
- The Transfer and Delegation of Responsibilities for Genetic Offspring in Gamete Provision
- On Regretting Things I Didn’t Do and Couldn’t Have Done
- Against Democracy Jason Brennan, 2016 Princeton, NJ Princeton University Press 296 pp., £17.25 (hb)
- The War on Cops: How the New Attack on Law and Order Makes Everyone Less Safe Heather Mac Donald, 2016 New York: Encounter Books 248 pp., $23.99 (hb)
- Liability to Deception and Manipulation: The Ethics of Undercover Policing
- Blood Oil: Tyrants, Violence, and the Rules that Run the World, Leif Wenar, 2016 Oxford & New York, Oxford University Press liii + 494 pp., £22.99 (hb)
- Blood Oil: Tyrants, Violence, and the Rules that Run the World, Leif Wenar, 2016 Oxford & New York, Oxford University Press liii + 494 pp., £22.99 (hb)
- Raising a Child with Respect
- Decoupling Marriage and Parenting
- The Distinctiveness of Polyamory
- Visiting the Ruins of Detroit: Exploitation or Cultural Tourism?
- Justice Across Boundaries: Whose Obligations? Onora O’Neill, 2016 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 249 pp. £21.99/$32.99 (pb)
- Overall Lifelong Fortune: A Critique of the Intrinsic Potential Account
- Pessimism About Motivating Modal Personism
- On White Ignorance, White Shame, and Other Pitfalls in Critical Philosophy of Race
- Justice, Injustice, and Critical Potential Beyond Borders: A Multi-Dimensional Affair
- Fiduciary Duties and Moral Blackmail
- Answering to Future People: Responsibility for Climate Change in a Breaking World
- The Ethics and Politics of Child Naming
- Against the Political Exclusion of the Incapable
- Just Schools and Good Childhoods: Non-preparatory Dimensions of Educational Justice
- Harming Civilians and the Associative Duties of Soldiers
- Private School, College Admissions and the Value of Education
- Embracing Impossible Justice
- Facsimiles of Flesh
- One Child: Do We Have a Right to More? Sarah Conly, 2016 New York, Oxford University Press 248 pp., $26.81 (hb)
- Do Guns Make Us Free? Firmin DeBrabander, 2015 Newhaven, CT Yale University Press, 296 pp., £20.00
- Government Surveillance and Why Defining Privacy Matters in a Post-Snowden World
- Government Surveillance and Why Defining Privacy Matters in a Post‐Snowden World
- Intimacy, Autonomy and (Non) Domination
- Mandatory Vaccination: An Unqualified Defence
- Knowing and Not-knowing For Your Own Good: The Limits of Epistemic Paternalism
- Knowing and Not‐Knowing For Your Own Good: The Limits of Epistemic Paternalism
- The New Philosophy of the Criminal Law Chad Flanders & Zachary Hoskins (eds), 2016 New York, Rowman and Littlefield vi + 276 pp, £80 (hb) £24.95 (pb)
- Morality and Interpretation: Commentary on Jonathan Glover’s Alien Landscapes?
- Expert Testimony, Law and Epistemic Authority
- Socratic Questioning in Alien Landscapes?
- Response to Alien Landscapes? Commentaries
- Planting Some New Thoughts on the Landscape
- What Is It Like to Be an Alien?
- Fiduciary Duties and the Ethics of Public Apology
- Excusing Economic Envy: On Injustice and Impotence
- Autonomy, Vote Buying, and Constraining Options
- Introduction to Special Issue on Applied Epistemology
- What’s So Bad About Killer Robots?
- Democracy, Epistemology and the Problem of All-White Juries
- Theorising and Exposing Institutional Racism in Britain: The Contribution of Ann and Michael Dummett to Critical Philosophy of Race
- Saplings or Caterpillars? Trying to Understand Children’s Wellbeing
- Doing and Allowing Harm. Fiona Woollard, 2015 Oxford, Oxford University Press 239 pp., £40.00 (hb)
- Better Dread (if Still Dead) than Red: High-Brown Passing in John Hearne’s Voices Under The Window
- Selecting Against Disability: The Liberal Eugenic Challenge and the Argument from Cognitive Diversity
- Hikers in Flip-Flops: Luck Egalitarianism, Democratic Equality and the Distribuenda of Justice
- Joint Epistemic Action: Some Applications
- Arguing for a New Form of Taxation: Lifetime Hourly Averaging
- In Defence of Reasonable Doubt
- Rape Myths and Domestic Abuse Myths as Hermeneutical Injustices
- Black Consciousness as Overcoming Hermeneutical Injustice
- Connecting Applied and Theoretical Bayesian Epistemology: Data Relevance, Pragmatics, and the Legal Case of Sally Clark
- Toxic Funding? Conflicts of Interest and their Epistemological Significance
- Philosophical Foundations of Human Rights Rowan Cruft, S. Matthew Liao & Massimo Renzo (eds), 2015 Oxford, Oxford University Press, xiii 720 pp., £39.99 (pb)
- Personal Sovereignty and Our Moral Rights to Non-Interference
- Remorse, Penal Theory and Sentencing Hannah Maslen, 2015 Oxford and Portland, OR, Hart Publishing xvi 212 pp. £40.00 (hb)
- Effective Altruism and its Critics
- Rose’s Prevention Paradox
- From Social Values to P-Values: The Social Epistemology of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
- Divide and Rule Better: On Subsidiarity, Legitimacy and the Epistemic Aim of Political Decision-Making
- Epistemic Injustice and Illness
- Cyberattacks as Casus Belli: A Sovereignty-Based Account
- Criminalising Unknowing Defence
- What the Old Right of Necessity Can Do for the Contemporary Global Poor
- The Moral Case for Intelligent Speed Adaptation
- Cyberattacks as Casus Belli: A Sovereignty‐Based Account
- Prospects for an Inclusive Theory of Justice: The Case of Non-Human Animals
- Children and Added Sugar: The Case for Restriction
- Is the Same-sex Marriage Debate Really Just about Marriage?
- Scepticism about Beneficiary Pays: A Critique
- Dignity, Disability, and Lifespan
- Is the Requirement of Sexual Exclusivity Consistent with Romantic Love?
- Why Keep a Dog and Bark Yourself? Making Choices for Non-Human Animals
- Better to Exploit than to Neglect? International Clinical Research and the Non-Worseness Claim
- Is Not Doing the Washing Up Like Draft Dodging? The Military Model for Resisting a Gender Based Labour Division
- Inequality in Political Philosophy and in Epidemiology: A Remarriage
- Disability and Domination: Lessons from Republican Political Philosophy
- Luck, Justice and Systemic Financial Risk
- Prioritarianism for Global Health Investments: Identifying the Worst Off
- Customary Trade and the Complications of Consent