'Political Philosophy: Looking Back'

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

Conference in honour of the political philosopher David Miller.

Panel 1

Chair: Ashwini Vasanthakumar 

Jonathan Quong: Miller’s Crossing 

Anna Stilz: On Self-Determination

 

Panel 2

Chair: Cécile Fabre 

Avia Pasternak: Mobs, Firms and Nations – a Critique of David Miller’s Account of Collective Responsibility 

Alan Patten: Public Good Fairness

 

Panel 3

Chair: Simon Caney 

Panel 3 'Religious Freedom, Public Space and Democratic Self-Determination'; 'Fertility, Mortality, and National Responsibility'

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

Conference in honour of the political philosopher David Miller.

Panel 1

Chair: Ashwini Vasanthakumar 

Jonathan Quong: Miller’s Crossing 

Anna Stilz: On Self-Determination

 

Panel 2

Chair: Cécile Fabre 

Avia Pasternak: Mobs, Firms and Nations – a Critique of David Miller’s Account of Collective Responsibility 

Alan Patten: Public Good Fairness

 

Panel 3

Chair: Simon Caney 

Panel 1 'Miller's Crossing'; 'On Self-Determination'

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

Conference in honour of the political philosopher David Miller.

Panel 1

Chair: Ashwini Vasanthakumar 

Jonathan Quong: Miller’s Crossing 

Anna Stilz: On Self-Determination

 

Panel 2

Chair: Cécile Fabre 

Avia Pasternak: Mobs, Firms and Nations – a Critique of David Miller’s Account of Collective Responsibility 

Alan Patten: Public Good Fairness

 

Panel 3

Chair: Simon Caney 

Roundtable Discussion

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

The Oxford Graduate Political Theory Conference is a forum for graduate students in political theory. Established in 2012, the conference aims to explore themes and topics in political theory that resonate with contemporary political events and phenomena. Now in its fourth year, the conference brings together original thought from graduate students as well as professors.

Keynote: Humeira Iqtidar (King’s College London) ‘Liberalism and Tolerance in the Post-Colony’

Keynote: Nathaniel Adam Tobias Coleman - ‘The Role of Race’

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

The Oxford Graduate Political Theory Conference is a forum for graduate students in political theory. Established in 2012, the conference aims to explore themes and topics in political theory that resonate with contemporary political events and phenomena. Now in its fourth year, the conference brings together original thought from graduate students as well as professors.

Keynote: Humeira Iqtidar (King’s College London) ‘Liberalism and Tolerance in the Post-Colony’

Panel 3: 'Theorizing Oppression and Emancipation'

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

The Oxford Graduate Political Theory Conference is a forum for graduate students in political theory. Established in 2012, the conference aims to explore themes and topics in political theory that resonate with contemporary political events and phenomena. Now in its fourth year, the conference brings together original thought from graduate students as well as professors.

Keynote: Humeira Iqtidar (King’s College London) ‘Liberalism and Tolerance in the Post-Colony’

Panel 2: 'Contested Conceptions of Objects and Property'

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

The Oxford Graduate Political Theory Conference is a forum for graduate students in political theory. Established in 2012, the conference aims to explore themes and topics in political theory that resonate with contemporary political events and phenomena. Now in its fourth year, the conference brings together original thought from graduate students as well as professors.

Keynote: Humeira Iqtidar (King’s College London) ‘Liberalism and Tolerance in the Post-Colony’

Panel 1: 'Responses to (Post-)Colonialism'

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on

The Oxford Graduate Political Theory Conference is a forum for graduate students in political theory. Established in 2012, the conference aims to explore themes and topics in political theory that resonate with contemporary political events and phenomena. Now in its fourth year, the conference brings together original thought from graduate students as well as professors.

Keynote: Humeira Iqtidar (King’s College London) ‘Liberalism and Tolerance in the Post-Colony’

Subscribe to