Book

Papers

Obesity and Responsibility for Health” in Responsibility and Healthcare, edited by Ben Davies, Gabriel De Marco, Neil Levy, and Julian Savulescu, Oxford University Press (2024).

Individual responsibility, large-scale harms, and radical uncertainty,” The Journal of Ethics (2021).

 “Rawls on global economic justice: a critical examination” in John Rawls: Debating the Major Questionsedited by Jon Mandle and Sarah Roberts-Cady, Oxford University Press (2020).

Relational egalitarianism,” Philosophy Compass, 15.7 (2020).

“The injustice of fat stigma,” Bioethics, 33.5 (2019).

On the Scope and Grounds of Social equality” in Social Equality: Essays on What It Means to be Equals, edited by Carina Fourie, Fabian Schuppert and Ivo Wallimann-Helmer, Oxford University Press (2015).

Against Institutional Luck Egalitarianism,” Journal of Ethics & Social Philosophy, 8.1 (2014).

Equal Standing in the Global Community,The Monist, 94.4 (2011).

Two Wrongs Don’t Make a Right: A Critique of Virginia Held’s Deontological Justification of Terrorism,” Social Theory and Practice, 37.4 (2011).

“Global Institutionalism and Justice” in Questioning Cosmopolitanism, edited by Stan van Hooft and Wim Vandekerckhove, Springer (2010).

“What is So Special about the State?” in Sovereign Justice: Global Justice in a World of Nations, edited by Diogo P. Aurélio, Gabriele De Angelis, and Regina Queiroz, deGruyter (2010).

Book Reviews & Other Works

One Another’s Equals: The Basis of Human Equality by Jeremy Waldron, Ethics, 128.4 (2018).

 Equality for Inegalitarians by George Sher, Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 94.2 (2016).

Overcoming Polarization: Why and How?Alabama Humanities Review, 2, winner of Alabama Humanities Foundation’s essay competition (2013) [written for a general audience].

“The Commitments of Cosmopolitanism,” review essay of Global Justice: A Cosmopolitan Account (Gillian Brock) and Global Inequality Matters (Darrel Moellendorf), Ethics & International Affairs, 24.3, (2010).

Strong Medicine: Creating Incentives for Pharmaceutical Research on Neglected Diseases by Michael Kremer and Rachel Glennerster, Ethics & International Affairs, 19.3 (2005).