As the Fall 2022 semester begins, the Center for Global Ethics and Politics would like to update everyone on our schedule and invite you to participate in the Center’s ongoing activities.
This fall, the Center will host four exciting talks — please mark your calendars!
Alasia Nuti (University of York, UK)
Must the Subaltern Speak Publicly? Political Liberalism and the Ethics of Fighting Severe InjusticeFriday, September 30 @ 12:00pm (ET), via Zoom
Arash Abizadeh (McGill University)
Agential Power and Structural Power, Causal and Non-CausalThursday, October 13 @ 6:30pm (ET),
In-person at the GC Political Science Lounge, Room 5200
Co-sponsored by the GC Political Theory Colloquium Ingrid Robeyns (University of Utrecht)
Limitarianism from a Global PerspectiveTuesday, November 15 @ 6:30pm (ET)
In person at the GC, Room TBA
Olúfẹmi O. Táíwò (Georgetown University)
Title TBATuesday, November 29 @ 6:30pm (ET)
In-person at the GC, Room TBA
For the talk that will take place online, an invitation will be sent out in advance with a Zoom registration link. We hope to broadcast the in-person talks simultaneously over Zoom.
In case you missed our Spring 2022 events — excellent sessions on “Ethics of AI and Health Care: Towards a Substantive Human Rights Framework” with Matthew Liao; “Protest, Silencing, and Epistemic Activism,” with José Medina; “Global Injustice, Moral Obligation and the Political Action Paradox” with Elizabeth Kahn; and “Women are Women,” with Carol Hay–you can catch up on the videos of these talks and all of our past events at our
YouTube channel or by visiting our
Center website. You can also find our podcasts there.
This past spring, our Center Director, Prof. Carol Gould, published an article on “Socializing the Means of Free Development” (
Philosophical Topics, Vol. 48, no. 2 (2022): 81-103).
https://www.jstor.org/stable/48652122. She also presented her paper “From Fraternity to Feminist Activist Solidarities: Confronting Structural Injustice and Gendered Authoritarianism” at the Conference on Feminist Politics for Today (Honoring the Work of Bat-Ami Bar On) at Binghamton University, May 7, 2022.
We are happy to report some news about our former fellows: Jonathan Kwan has taken up a position as Assistant Professor of Philosophy at New York University Abu Dahbi, and Gregory Slack was appointed to that rank in the Department of Philosophy and Religious Studies at Middle Tennessee State University. Sid Issar has started a position as Assistant Professor of Political Theory at the University of Louisville. Rachel Brown, currently Assistant Professor of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Washington University in St. Louis, recently had her book manuscript
Unsettled Labors: Migrant Caregivers in Palestine/Israel accepted for publication by Duke University Press, and Jesse Spafford, Postdoctoral Fellow at Trinity College Dublin, had his book
Social Anarchism and the Rejection of Moral Tyranny accepted by Cambridge University Press. Current Graduate Fellow Callum Zavos MacRae recently published an article commenting on a piece by Jesse Spafford which had appeared in the
Journal of Value Inquiry in 2020. MacRae’s article is entitled “Communists, Anarchists, and Suckers: A Reply to Spafford on ‘Conditional Exchange’”
Journal of Value Inquiry, 2021.
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10790-021-09837-7.
Looking ahead, please hold the following dates for our spring colloquia:
Seyla Benhabib (Columbia Law), “The Crisis of International Law and its Implications for the Refugee Convention” Tuesday, February 7, 6:30pm-8:15pm.
Alison Jaggar (University of Colorado Boulder), Wednesday, March 8, 4:15pm-6:15pm.
Co-sponsored with the Philosophy Colloquium and the Marx Wartofsky Lecture. Briana Toole (Claremont McKenna and the Princeton University Center for Human Values), Tuesday, March 28, 6:30pm-8:15pm.
Laura Kane (Worcester State University and former CGEP Graduate Fellow), Tuesday, April 18, 6:30pm-8:15pm.
Stay up to date with what’s happening at the Center by following us on twitter
@global_ethics,
like us on Facebook, or subscribe to our mailing list
here.
Best wishes for a fine start to the semester, and we look forward to your participation in our activities here at the Center!