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December, 2012

Curriculum Vitae Reader in

Durham Law School Phone: +44 (0)191 334 4365 Durham University Fax: +44 (0)191 334 2801 Durham, DH1 3LE Email: [email protected] United Kingdom Website: http://thombrooks.info

CITIZENSHIP

UK & USA national

EDUCATION

1992-1997 B.A., Music and , William Paterson University, 1997 1997-1999 M.A., Political Science, Arizona State University, 1999 1999-2000 M.A., (1st class), University College Dublin, 2000 2001-2004 Ph.D., Philosophy, , 2004 2005-2006 Postgraduate Certificate in Academic Practice,

EMPLOYMENT

2004-2007 Lecturer in Political Thought, Newcastle University 2004-2005 Visiting Fellow; Centre for , Philosophy, and Public Affairs; Department of Moral Philosophy; 2007—12 Reader in Political and Legal Philosophy, Newcastle University 2010-2011 Academic Visitor, Faculty of Philosophy, 2011 Visiting Fellow, Department of Government, Uppsala University 2012 Visiting Scholarship, St John’s College, University of Oxford 2012— Reader in Law, , Durham University 2012— Associate Member, Philosophy Department, Durham University

HONOURS AND AWARDS

 University College Dublin Professor Magennis Award for first in class, 2000  Hegel Society of Great Britain’s Graduate Essay Prize, 2004  Academician, Academy of Social Sciences, elected 2009  Fellow, Royal Historical Society, elected 2010  Fellow, Royal Society of Arts, elected 2012

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PUBLICATIONS

Books Written

Hegel’s : A Systematic Reading of the Philosophy of Right. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2007; paperback 2009; 2nd edition 2012. Columbia University Press is the North American distributor.

Punishment. London: Routledge, 2012 (paperback 2012). European Sociological Association ‘Book of the Month’ for November 2012. Chapter 2 reprinted in Retribution (2013). Chapter 3 reprinted in Deterrence (2013). Chapter 7 reprinted in Sentencing (2013). Chapter 10 reprinted in Juvenile Offending (2013).

Global : An Introduction. Oxford: Blackwell, expected 2013.

Political Philosophy: The Fundamentals. Oxford: Blackwell, expected 2014 (in progress).

Books Edited

Rousseau and Law. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2005.

The Legacy of (with ). New York and London: Continuum, 2005 (paperback 2007).

Locke and Law. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007.

The Global Justice Reader. Oxford: Blackwell, 2008 (paperback 2008).

The Right to a Fair Trial. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2009.

Ethics and Moral Philosophy. Boston and Leiden: Brill, 2011.

New Waves in Ethics. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011 (paperback 2011).

Global Justice and International Affairs. Boston and Leiden: Brill, 2012.

Hegel’s Philosophy of Right. Oxford: Blackwell, 2012.

Justice and the Capabilities Approach. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2012.

Rawls and Law. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2012.

Just War Theory. Boston and Leiden: Brill, 2013.

Books Edited, in Progress

Current Controversies in Political Philosophy. London: Routledge, expected 2013.

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Deterrence. Aldershot: Ashgate, expected 2013.

Ethical : British Idealism and the Politics of Recognition. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, expected 2014.

Law and Legal Theory. Leiden: Brill, expected 2013.

Juvenile Offending. Aldershot: Ashgate, expected 2013.

New Waves in Global Justice. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, expected 2013 (paperback 2013).

Retribution. Aldershot: Ashgate, expected 2013.

Sentencing. Aldershot: Ashgate, expected 2013.

Shame . Aldershot: Ashgate, expected 2013.

Rawls’s Political (co-edited with Martha C. Nussbaum). New York: Columbia University Press, expected 2013.

Journal Numbers Edited

Journal of Moral Philosophy 1(1) (2004)—9(4) (2012).

Special issue of Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 66 (2012).

Special issue of Contemporary Social Science 8(1) (2013).

Articles

1. ‘Corlett on Kant, Hegel, and Retribution’, Philosophy 76(298) (2001): 561-80.

2. ‘Gilligan on Deterrence and the Death Penalty: Has Legal Punishment Failed Us?’ Ethics and Justice 3(2) (2001) / 4(1) (2002): 1-10.

3. ‘In Search of Śiva: Mahādēviyakka’s Vīraśaivism’, Asian Philosophy 12(1) (2002): 21-34.

4. ‘A Defence of Sceptical ’, Politics 22(3) (2002): 152-62.

5. ‘ and Distributing Responsibilities’, Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 5(3) (2002): 92-97.

6. ‘Saving the Greatest Number’, Logique et Analyse 45(177/178) (2002): 55-59.

7. ‘Does Philosophy Deserve a Place at the Supreme Court?’ Rutgers Law Record 27(1) (2003): 1-17. Reprinted in Rawls and Law. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2012, pp. 137-53.

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8. ‘Kant’s Theory of Punishment’, Utilitas 15(2) (2003): 206-24.

9. ‘Choosing Correct ’, Archives de Philosophie du Droit 47 (2003): 365-69.

10. ‘Can We Justify Political Inequality?’ Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie 89(3) (2003): 426-38.

11. ‘T. H. Green’s Theory of Punishment’, History of Political Thought 24(4) (2003): 685-701. Reprinted in John Morrow (ed.), T. H. Green. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007.

12. ‘Is Hegel a Retributivist?’ Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 49/50 (2004): 113-26. Winner of a prize from the Hegel Society of Great Britain.

13. ‘On the Relation between Law and ’, Associations: Journal for Legal and Social Theory 8(1) (2004): 135-39.

14. ‘Hegel’s Theory of International Politics: Reply to Jaeger’, Review of International Studies 30(1) (2004): 149-52.

15. ‘Retributivist Arguments against Capital Punishment’, Journal of 35(2) (2004): 188-97.

16. ‘The Right to Trial by Jury’, Journal of Applied Philosophy 21(2) (2004): 197- 212. Reprinted in The Right to a Fair Trial. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2009, pp. 83-98.

17. ‘A Defence of Jury Nullification’, Res Publica 10(4) (2004): 401-23. Reprinted in The Right to a Fair Trial. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2009, pp. 225- 47.

18. ‘On Jury Nullification’, Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie 97 (2005): 169-75.

19. ‘Better Luck Next Time: A comparative analysis of and Mahāyāna Buddhism on reincarnation’, Journal of Indian Philosophy and Religion 10 (2005): 1-25.

20. ‘Hegel’s Ambiguous Contribution to Legal Theory’, Res Publica 11(1) (2005): 85-94.

21. ‘Kantian Punishment and Retributivism: A Reply to Clark’, Ratio 18(2) (2005): 237-45.

22. ‘Herbert Lionel Adolphus Hart’, in Stuart Brown (ed.), Dictionary of Twentieth Century British Philosophers. Bristol: Thoemmes Continuum, 2005, pp. 389-91.

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23. (with Fabian Freyenhagen) ‘Introduction’, in Thom Brooks and Fabian Freyenhagen (eds), The Legacy of John Rawls. New York and London: Continuum, 2005, pp. 1-21.

24. ‘An Intentionally New Way of Thinking about Voting’, Review Journal of Political Philosophy 3 (2005): 1-7. Czech translation is ‘Intencionálně novỳ způsob myšlení o volbách’, Filosoficky Časopis 52(3) (2004), pp. 483-88.

25. ‘Let a Thousand Nomoi Bloom? Four Problems with Robert Cover’s Nomos and Narrative’, Issues in Legal Scholarship (article five) (2006): 1-20.

26. ‘Knowledge and Power in ’s Political Thought’, International Journal of Philosophical Studies 14(1) (2006): 51-77.

27. ‘Does Bevir’s Logic improve our understanding of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right?’ The European Legacy 11(7) (2006): 765-74.

28. ‘Plato, Hegel, and Democracy’, Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 53/54 (2006): 24-50.

29. ‘On Ellis’s Deterrence Theory of Punishment’, Archiv für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie 92(4) (2006): 594-96.

30. ‘The Reception of Hegel in Britain’, in A. C. Grayling and Andrew Pyle (eds.), The Encyclopedia of British Philosophy. Bristol: Thoemmes Continuum, 2006, pp. 1424-25.

31. ‘No Rubber Stamp: Hegel’s Constitutional Monarch’, History of Political Thought 28(1) (2007): 91-119.

32. ‘Rethinking Punishment’, International Journal of and 1(1-2) (2007): 27-34.

33. ‘Equality and Democracy: The Problem of Minimal Competency’, Ethical Perspectives 14(1) (2007): 3-12.

34. ‘Between and : Dworkin and Hegel on Legal Theory’, Georgia State University Law Review 23(3) (2007): 513-60.

35. ‘Punishing States That Cause Global Poverty’, William Mitchell Law Review 33(2) (2007): 519-32.

36. ‘The Fall Paradox’, Philosophy and Theology 19(1-2) (2007): 3-5.

37. ‘Human Rights’, in Mark Bevir (ed.), Encyclopedia of Governance, vol. I. Thousand Oaks: SAGE, 2007, pp. 423-28.

38. ‘Ride the Lightning: Why Not Execute Murderers?’ in William Irwin (ed.), Metallica and Philosophy. Oxford: Blackwell, 2007, pp. 127-34. 6

39. ‘Shame on Me, Shame on You? Nussbaum on Shame Punishment’, Journal of Applied Philosophy 25(4) (2008): 322-34. Reprinted in Shame Punishment. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2013.

40. ‘Was Green a Utilitarian in Practice?’ Collingwood and British Idealism Studies 14(1) (2008): 5-15.

41. ‘Is Plato’s Political Philosophy Anti-Democratic?’ in E. Kofmel (ed.), Anti- Democratic Thought. Exeter: Imprint Academic, 2008, pp. 17-33.

42. ‘A Two-Tiered Reparations Theory: A Reply to Wenar’, Journal of Social Philosophy 39(4) (2008): 666-69.

43. ‘Bringing the Republic to Life: Teaching Plato’s Republic to First-Year Students’, Education, Citizenship and Social Justice 3(3) (2008): 211-21.

44. ‘Punishment and Reincarnation’, Journal of Indian Philosophy and Religion 13 (2008): 21-38.

45. ‘Miller et *Distributing Responsibilities+’ (in French), Archives de Philosophie du Droit 52 (2009): 381-86.

46. ‘A Critique of Pragmatism and Deliberative Democracy’, Transactions of the Charles S. Peirce Society 45(1) (2009): 50-54.

47. ‘Muirhead, Hetherington, and Mackenzie’, in William Sweet (ed.), The Moral, Social and Political Philosophy of the British Idealists. Exeter: Imprint Academic, 2009, pp. 209-32.

48. ‘The Problem with Polygamy’, Philosophical Topics 37(2) (2009): 109-22. Reprinted in Justice and the Capabilities Approach. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2012, pp. 377-90.

49. ‘Justifying Terrorism’, Public Affairs Quarterly 24(3) (2010): 189-95.

50. ‘Punishment and British Idealism’, in Jesper Ryberg and J. Angelo Corlett (eds), Punishment and Ethics: New Perspectives. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010, pp. 16-32.

51. ‘Hegel: Philosophy of Politics’, Oxford Bibliographies Online: Philosophy (2010).

52. ‘The Bible and Capital Punishment’, Philosophy and Theology 22(1-2) (2010): 279-83.

53. ‘The View from the Journal of Moral Philosophy’, American Philosophical Association Newsletter on Feminism and Philosophy 10(1) (2010): 16-17.

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54. ‘The Scotch: Lessons from Hegel’ in Fritz Allhof and Marcus Adams (eds), Whiskey and Philosophy: A Small Batch of Spirited Ideas. Hoboken: John Wiley & Sons, 2010, pp. 152-61.

55. ‘Retribution and Capital Punishment’, in Mark D. White (ed.), Retributivism: Essays on Theory and Policy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011, pp. 232-45. Reprinted in Retribution. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2012.

56. ‘Is Bradley a Retributivist?’ History of Political Thought 32(1) (2011): 83-95.

57. ‘What Did the British Idealists Ever Do for Us?’ in Thom Brooks (ed.), New Waves in Ethics. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011, pp. 28-47.

58. ‘Punishment: Political, Not Moral’, New Criminal Law Review 14(3) (2011): 427-38.

59. ‘Respect for Nature: The Capabilities Approach’, Ethics, Policy and Environment 14(2) (2011): 143-46.

60. ‘Rethinking Remedial Responsibilities’, Ethics and Global Politics 4(3) (2011): 195-202.

61. ‘, , and the Liberalism of Fear’, Theoretical and 1(3) (2011): 57-60.

62. ‘, Freedom, and Punishment’, Legal Theory in China 2 (2011): 161- 69. Chinese translation is ‘自主、自由与惩罚’, Legal Theory in China 2 (2011): 154 -60.

63. ‘British Idealism’, Oxford Bibliographies Online: Philosophy (2011).

64. ‘Punishment’, Oxford Bibliographies Online: Philosophy (2011).

65. ‘Climate Change and Negative Duties’, Politics 32 (2012): 1-9.

66. ‘Hegel and the Unified Theory of Punishment’, in Thom Brooks (ed.), Hegel’s Philosophy of Right. Oxford: Blackwell, 2012, pp. 103-23.

67. ‘Natural Law Internalism’, in Thom Brooks (ed.), Hegel’s Philosophy of Right. Oxford: Blackwell, 2012, pp. 167-79.

68. ‘After Fukushima Daiichi: The Importance of Global Institutions for Nuclear Power Policy’, Ethics, Policy and Environment 15(1) (2012): 63-69.

69. ‘Between Statism and Cosmopolitanism: Hegel and the Possibility of Global Justice’, in Andrew Buchwalter (ed.), Hegel and Global Justice. Dordrecht: Springer, 2012, pp. 65-83.

70. ‘Preserving Capabilities’, American Journal of 12(6) (2012): 45-46.

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71. ‘Reciprocity as Mutual Recognition’, The Society 21(1) (2012): 21-35.

72. ‘The British Citizenship Test: The Case for Reform’, The Political Quarterly 83(3) (2012): 560-66.

73. ‘Reply to Redding, Rosen and Wood’, Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 66 (2012): 23-35.

74. ‘Editorial: The Academic Journal Editor—Secrets Revealed’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 9(3) (2012): 313-25.

75. ‘Moral Frankensteins’, AJOB Neuroscience 3(4) (2012): 28-30.

76. ‘Punishment and Moral Sentiments’, Review of Metaphysics (2012), forthcoming.

77. ‘Global Justice and Politics’, in Fred D’Agostino and Jerry Gaus (eds), Routledge Companion to Social and Political Philosophy. London: Routledge, 2013, forthcoming.

78. ‘Alcohol and Public Policy’, Contemporary Social Science (2013), forthcoming.

79. ‘Introduction to Climate Change Justice’, PS: Political Science and Politics (2013), forthcoming.

80. ‘The Real Challenge of Climate Change’, PS: Political Science and Politics (2013), forthcoming.

81. ‘Philosophy Unbound: The Idea of Global Philosophy’, Metaphilosophy 44(3) (2013), forthcoming.

82. ‘In Defence of Political Theory: Impact and Opportunities’, Political Studies Review (2013), forthcoming.

83. ‘Capabilities’, in Hugh LaFollette (ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Ethics. Oxford: Blackwell, 2013, forthcoming.

84. ‘Citizenship’, in Hugh LaFollette (ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Ethics. Oxford: Blackwell, 2013, forthcoming.

Articles Forthcoming

1. ‘The Capabilities Approach and Political Liberalism’, in Thom Brooks and Martha C. Nussbaum (eds), Rawls’s Political Liberalism. New York: Columbia University Press.

2. ‘Stakeholder Sentencing’, in Julian Roberts and Jesper Ryberg (eds), Popular Punishment: On the Normative Significance of Public Opinion for Penal Theory. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 9

3. ‘Criminal Harms’, in Thom Brooks (ed.), Law and Legal Theory. Boston and Leiden: Brill.

4. ‘Government Priorities and Academic Research Funding’, in Transparency International (ed.), Global Corruption Report: Education. London: Routledge.

5. ‘Why Save the Planet?’ in Thom Brooks (ed.), Current Controversies in Political Philosophy. London: Routledge.

6. ‘Global Justice and Global Philosophy’ in Thom Brooks (ed.), New Waves in Global Justice. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

7. ‘Ethical Citizenship and the Stakeholder Society’ in Thom Brooks (ed.), Ethical Citizenship: British Idealism and the Politics of Recognition. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.

8. ‘Bernard Williams, Republicanism, and the Liberalism of Fear: Problems and Prospects’, in Chris Herrera (ed.), The Moral Philosophy of Bernard Williams. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing.

9. ‘Democracy’, Oxford Bibliographies Online: Philosophy.

10. ‘Legal Philosophy’, Oxford Bibliographies Online: Philosophy.

Articles in Magazines and Newspapers

1. ‘Thought and deed born of idealism’, Times Higher Education Supplement (20 October 2006): 28-29.

2. ‘Defence of the jury is an open and shut case’, Times Higher Education Supplement (2 March 2007): 14.

3. ‘Us against us in the land of Mahatma’, Times Higher Education Supplement (29 June 2007): 21.

4. of : In Defense of America’s Tradition of Religious Equality, by Martha C. Nussbaum, for Times Higher Education (17 April 2008): 47.

5. ‘Five Secrets to Publishing Success’, InsideHigherEd.Com (15 August 2008) (URL: http://www.insidehighered.com/views/2008/08/15/brooks).

6. Killing Civilians in War, by Jeff McMahan, for Times Higher Education (8 October 2009): 47.

7. ‘Better together’, Times Higher Education (10 February 2011): 26.

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8. ‘“Observergate” and Academic Freedom’, New Statesman (15 April 2011) (URL: http://www.newstatesman.com/blogs/cultural-capital/2011/04/research- funding-ahrc-society).

9. ‘A New Approach’, The Philosophers’ Magazine 54 (2011): 110-11.

10. ‘Mention of Big Society a Big Worry’, The Journal (Newcastle) (22 June 2011): 18.

11. ‘A Yankee in King Alan’s Court’, Times Higher Education (7 July 2011): 44-46.

12. British Idealism: A History, by W. J. Mander, for Times Higher Education (14 July 2011): 51.

13. ‘A Good Citizenship Bill’, Progress (May 2012): 11.

14. ‘Information Lacking for PCC Election’, The Journal (Newcastle) (29 September 2012): 35.

15. So You Want to be a Politician?, edited by Shane Greer, for Times Higher Education (11 October 2012): 47.

Other essays

1. ‘Publishing Advice for Graduate Students’ (2008). Downloaded over 12,000 times on the Social Science Research Network (SSRN) since December 2005.

2. ‘Guidelines on How to Referee’ (2010). Downloaded over 1,500 times on the Social Science Research Network (SSRN) since December 2010.

Editorials

1. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 1(1) (2004): 7-8. 2. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 1(3) (2004): 263. 3. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 2(1) (2005): 7. 4. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 2(3) (2005): 263. 5. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 3(3) (2006): 263. 6. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 4(1) (2007): 7. 7. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 5(2) (2008): 177. 8. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 6(1) (2009): 3. 9. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 7(2) (2010): 157. 10. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 8(1) (2011): 3-4. 11. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 8(4) (2011): 493. 12. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 9(2) (2012): 145-46. 13. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 9(4) (2012): 485-89.

Book Reviews (a selection)

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1. On Voluntary Servitude: False Consciousness and the Theory of , by Michael Rosen, for International Journal of Philosophical Studies 9(1) (2000): 116-17.

2. Political Psychology: Cultural and Crosscultural Foundations, edited by Stanley A. Renshon and John Duckitt, for International Journal of Philosophical Studies 9(4) (2001): 555-58.

3. The Logic of the History of Ideas, by Mark Bevir, for International Journal of Philosophical Studies 10(4) (2002): 505-6.

4. Building Democracy in South Asia: India, Nepal, Pakistan, by Maya Chadda, for Democratization 9(4) (2002): 191-93.

5. Kantian Moral Theory and the Destruction of the Self, by Sandra Jane Fairbanks, for Ethics 113(2) (2003): 458-59.

6. Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason and Metaphysics: Concepts and Problems, by Theodor W. Adorno, for Philosophy in Review 23(3) (2003): 160-63.

7. The Unity of Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit: A Systematic Interpretation, by Jon Stewart, for International Journal of Philosophical Studies 11(4) (2003): 489-91.

8. Hegel and the Philosophy of Right, by Dudley Knowles, for British Journal for the History of Philosophy 12(3) (2004): 559-63.

9. Exercising Discretion: Decision-making in the Criminal Justice System and Beyond, edited by Loraine Gelsthorpe and Nicola Padfield, for Law and Politics Book Review 14(2) (2004).

10. Hegel, Nietzsche, and Philosophy: Thinking Freedom, by Will Dudley, for Philosophy 79(307) (2004): 149-53.

11. T. H. Green and the Development of Ethical , by Matt Carter, for Political Studies Review 2(3) (2004): 357-58.

12. Reason without Freedom: The Problem of Epistemic Normativity, by David Owens, for International Journal of Philosophical Studies 12(4) (2004): 513- 15.

13. The British Constitution in the Twentieth Century, ed. Vernon Bogdaner, for Law and Politics Book Review 15(6) (2005): 531-36.

14. T. H. Green: The Philosophical Foundations of Politics, by Colin Tyler, for Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 51/52 (2005): 141-44.

15. Dworkin and His Critics, edited by Justine Burley, Modern Law Review 69(1) (2006): 140-42.

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16. The State of Democratic Theory, by Ian Shapiro, for Ethics 116(2) (2006): 442-44.

17. Debates in Indian Philosophy: Classical, Colonial, and Contemporary, by A. Raghuramaraju, for Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews (2007).

18. The Opening of Hegel’s Logic: From Being to Infinity, by Stephen Houlgate, for Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 55/56 (2007): 195-97.

19. Metaphysics, Method and Politics: The Political Philosophy of R. G. Collingwood, by James Connelly, for Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 55/56 (2007): 198-200.

20. Punishment and Retribution, by Leo Zaibert, for New Criminal Law Review 10(2) (2007): 311-14.

21. Hiding from Humanity: Disgust, Shame, and the Law, by , for Journal of Applied Philosophy 24(3) (2007): 329-31.

22. Rethinking Imprisonment, by Richard Lippke, for Ethics 118(3) (2008): 562- 64.

23. Kant’s ‘Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals’: A Commentary, by Jens Timmermann, for Political Studies Review 6(3) (2008): 380-81.

24. Advice and : The Politics of Judicial Appointments, by Lee Epstein and Jeffrey Segal, for Political Studies Review 6: 93-94.

25. German Idealism and the Concept of Punishment, by Jean-Christophe Merle, for European Journal of Philosophy 20(1) (2012): 179-82.

26. Modernity in Indian Social Theory, by A. Raghuramaraju, for Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews (2012).

27. The Lost Age of Reason: Philosophy in Early Modern India 1450-1700, by Jonardon Ganeri, for Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews, forthcoming.

28. The Tyranny of Utility: Behavioral Social Science and the Rise of , by Gilles Saint-Paul, for Perspectives on Politics, forthcoming.

29. International Law as Social Construct: The Struggle for Global Justice, by Carlo Focarelli, for Legal Studies, under contract.

30. Recidivist Punishments, edited by Claudio Tamburrini and Jesper Ryberg, for Law and Politics Book Review, under contract.

31. Reforming Justice: A Journey to Fairness in Asia, by Livingston Armytage, for Journal of Human Development and Capabilities, under contract.

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32. Conscience and Conviction: The Case for Civil Disobedience, by Kimberley Brownlee, for Law and Philosophy, under contract.

PAPERS READ, other than versions of published papers (a selection)

 Paper on Kant and punishment, Scottish Postgraduate Philosophy Association, University of Stirling, 2002.  Paper on Dworkin, Hegel and legal theory, Internationalen Vereinigung für Rechts- und Sozialphilosophie, 21st World Congress, Lund University, 2003.  Paper on the future of the right to trial by jury, Society for Applied Philosophy Workshop, University of London, 2003.  Comment on Sharon Cowan, Criminalization Workshop, University of Stirling, 2005.  Comment on Chris Megone, Society for Applied Philosophy, St Anne’s College, Oxford, 2005.  Reply to Michael Davis, Online Philosophy Conference, 2006.  Comment on Joel Rickard, Problems and Prospects for conference, Durham University, 2006.  Paper for session on negative and positive freedom, Café Culture, Newcastle upon Tyne, 2007.  Comment on Yirmiyahu Yovel, Hegel Society of Great Britain, St Edmund Hall, Oxford, 2007.  Paper on Hegel and international law, International Politics Research Seminar, Newcastle University, 2007.  Comment on Robert Talisse, Political Studies Association, Swansea University, 2008.  Comment on David Miller, Centre for the Study of Mind in Nature, University of Oslo, 2008.  Paper on publishing advice for graduate conference, Political Studies Association, 2004 and 2009.  Participant in roundtable on work of James Wilson, St Andrews, 2009.  Paper on journal editing, American Philosophical Association—Eastern Division, 2009.  Paper for session on women and journal publishing, American Philosophical Association—Eastern Division, 2009.  Participant in roundtable on moral foundations of a free society, Cambridge, 2010.  Comment on Loren Lomasky and Fernando Teson, Georgia State University, 2010.  Paper on Hegel and the state, Newcastle Law School, 2010.  Paper on just war theory, Carlsberg Akademi, Copenhagen, 2010.  Comment on Jonathan Wolff, University of Oslo, 2010.  Comment on Shannon Hoff, American Philosophical Association—Eastern Division, 2010.  Invited speaker at Academic Stand Against Poverty (ASAP) UK launch, University of Birmingham, 2011.  Paper on criminal justice and punishment, Cardiff University, 2011.  Invited speaker on higher education panel, House of Commons, Westminster, 2011. 14

 Invited speaker on ethics and climate change, Cafe Philosophique, Newcastle upon Tyne, 2011.  Invited speaker on criminal justice and the politics of recognition, Festival of Festival, Newcastle upon Tyne, 2011.  Invited speaker on citizenship and immigration tests, Identity and Migration on Tyneside conference, Newcastle upon Tyne, 2011.  Paper on the current state of academic philosophy, Institute of Philosophy, School of Advanced Study, University of London, 2012.  Invited speaker on Labour Party election strategy, Sunderland Civic Centre, 2012.  Invited speaker on fairness and responsibility in an unequal society, Senate House, University of London, 2012.  Invited speaker on feminism and justice, Glasgow Sceptics Society, 2012.  Invited speaker on the domestic and international challenges facing British politics, Newcastle University, 2012.  Invited speaker on criminal law and sentencing, Carlsberg Akademi, Copenhagen, 2012.  Invited speaker on public opinion and sentencing, Edinburgh Sceptics Society, 2013.

Invited Seminar Presentations (a selection)

 Ockham Society, University of Oxford, 21 October 2003  Political Theory Workshop, University of Sheffield, 11 February 2004  Politics Department, Newcastle University, 6 May 2004  Political Theory Workshop, University of York (UK), 25 October 2005  IPPE Seminar, Lancaster University, 14 December 2005  Politics Department, Edinburgh University, 18 October 2006  Philosophy Department, Glasgow University, 7 November 2006  Departments of Philosophy, University of St Andrews, 15 March 2007  School of Philosophy, University College Dublin, 4 April 2007  Oxford Jurisprudence Discussion Group, University College, Oxford, 29 November 2007  Department of Policy Studies, University of Lincoln, 22 May 2008  Politics Department, Cardiff University, 20 November 2008  Philosophy Department, Durham University, 5 February 2009  Political Philosophy Group, University of Stirling, 25 March 2009  Ethics Group, Boston University, 18 December 2009  Philosophy Society, Edinburgh University, 11 March 2010  Newcastle Law School, 2 June 2010  Philosophy Society, Edinburgh University, 23 September 2010  Philosophy Department, Oxford Brookes University, 6 October 2010  Centre for Ethics, Law and Public Affairs, University of Warwick, 2 November 2010  Yale Working Group in Moral Philosophy, , 19 April 2011  Philosophy  Ethics Colloquium, Groningen University, 15 November 2011  Faculty of Philosophy, Groningen University, 16 November 2011 15

 Department of Government, Uppsala University, 21 November 2011  Philosophy Society, Edinburgh University, 2 February 2012  Durham Law School, 30 July 2012  Law School, Edge Hill University, 31 January 2013  Edinburgh Legal Theory Research Group, Edinburgh Law School, March 2013  School of Philosophy, University College Dublin, 28 March 2013

PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS (a selection)

 American Philosophical Association (APA), member since 2001; Subcommittee on Journal Practices, 2010—11; Committee on Philosophy and Law, 2007—12 and chair (2009—12); Berger Prize judge (2009, 2011).  American Political Science Association (APSA), since 2011.  American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy, member since 2009.  Aristotelian Society, member since 2001.  Association for Political Thought (UK), founding member since 2008; Secretary (2008—12).  Association of Philosophy Journal Editors, member since 2009; Co-chair (2009—12).  British Idealism Research Group, member since 2004; Treasurer and Membership Secretary, since 2012.  British Philosophical Association, member since 2003.  Elections, Public Opinion and Parties Group, member since 2011.  Global Justice and Human Rights Research Group, member since 2007; Chair, 2007—2011.  Hansard Society, since 2011.  Hegel Society of America, member since 2004.  Hegel Society of Great Britain, member since 2001; Conference Organizer, 2004—10; Council Member, since 2006.  Human Development and Capability Association, member since 2010.  Newcastle Ethics, Legal, and Political Philosophy (NELPP) Group, founder and member 2004—12; Chair (2004—11).  Political Studies Association, member since 2003; Executive Board member, 2006—9; Chair, Awards and Prizes Subcommittee, 2006—8; Chair, Specialist Groups Subcommittee, 2009; Member, Education Committee, 2006—9.  Society of Legal Scholars, since 2012.

RESEARCH CENTRE MEMBERSHIP

 Centre for Criminal Law and Criminal Justice, Durham University, member since 2012.  Centre for Ethics, Law and the Life Sciences, Durham University, member since 2012.  Centre for the History of Philosophy (CHiPhi); Leeds, Sheffield and York universities; associate member since 2009.  Centre for the History of Political Thought, Durham University, member since 2012. 16

 Gender and Law at Durham, Durham University, member since 2012.  Human Rights Centre, Durham University, member since 2012.  The Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research, Associate Member since 2012.

OTHER PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES (a selection)

 Editor and founder, Journal of Moral Philosophy, 2003—12 Associate Editor, Journal of Moral Philosophy, from 2013  Editor and founder, Review Journal of Political Philosophy, 2003  Editorial Boards: Contemporary Social Science, 2011— Hegel Bulletin (Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain), 2009— Journal of Moral Philosophy, 2003— Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews, 2011— Philosophical Writings, 2006— Public Affairs Quarterly, 2009—11 Review Journal of Political Philosophy, 2003  Book series editor: (with Simon Kirchin), Bloomsbury Ethics, Bloomsbury Academic, 2009—. Crime and Punishment: Critical Essays in Legal Philosophy, Ashgate, 2012—3. Palgrave Studies in Ethics and Public Policy, Palgrave Macmillan, 2012—. Studies in Moral Philosophy, Brill, 2010—. Studies in Global Justice and Human Rights, Edinburgh University Press, 2009—. Textbooks in Global Justice and Human Rights, Edinburgh University Press, 2009—.  Editorial advisory board member for The Broadview Anthology of Social and Political Thought, 2008.  Manuscript referee for over 50 academic journals in the US, UK, and abroad, including: African Journal of Political Science and International Relations; American Journal of Political Science; Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy; British Journal for the History of Philosophy; Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence; Canadian Journal of Political Science; Contemporary Political Theory; Criminal Law and Philosophy; Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy; Environment and Planning D: Space and Society; Environmental Politics; Ethical Theory and Moral Practice; Ethics; Ethics and International Affairs; European Journal of International Relations; European Journal of Political Theory; The European Legacy; History of Philosophy Quarterly; History of Political Thought; Inquiry; International Journal of Philosophical Studies; International Journal of Social Economics; International Studies Quarterly; International Theory; Journal of Applied Philosophy; Journal of Bioethical Inquiry; Journal of Human Development and Capabilities; Journal of Moral Philosophy; Journal of Philosophical Research; Journal of Social Philosophy; Journal of the ; Law and Philosophy; Law and Society Review; Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy; Monist; New Criminal Law Review; 17

Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews; Philosophia; Philosophical Psychology; Philosophical Quarterly; Philosophical Studies; Philosophical Writings; Political Studies; Political Studies Review; Politics; Politics, Philosophy, and Economics; Politics and Policy; Polity; Public Affairs Quarterly; Raisons Politiques; Res Publica; Social Psychology Quarterly; Southern Journal of Philosophy.  Manuscript referee for numerous academic and professional publishers, including Blackwell, Bloomsbury Academic, Broadview, Cambridge University Press, Columbia University Press, Continuum, Edinburgh University Press, McGill-Queen’s University Press, Oxford University Press, Palgrave Macmillan, Polity, Rowman and Littlefield, Routledge, and Springer.  Reviewer for National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) (Philosophy).  Reviewer for National Science Foundation (NSF) (Philosophy).  Member, Peer Review College, Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) (Philosophy), 2010—11.  Reviewer for Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) (Philosophy) and Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) (Politics).  Reviewer for Academy of Finland Research Council for Culture and Society (Philosophy), 2010, 2011.  Reviewer for Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek – Vlaanderen (FWO) (Law), Belgium.  Reviewer for National Research Foundation (NRF), South Africa.  Review for U.S. Fulbright Scholar Award (Philosophy)  Judge for Sir Ernest Barker Prize for Best Dissertation in Political Theory, Political Studies Association, 2011.  Judge for Bernard Crick Teaching Prize, Political Studies Association, 2007, 2008.  Assessor, tenure and promotions committee, Carnegie Mellon University (Philosophy), York University (Canada) (Philosophy).  External examiner, Bath Spa University, BA in Philosophy and Ethics, 2007- 11.  Editor (Philosophy of Law), PhilPapers (http://philpapers.org), 2011—12.  Conference organizer (with Fabian Freyenhagen), ‘Hegelian Philosophy—a Renaissance?’ University of Sheffield, 2003.  Conference organizer on philosophy of crime and punishment, Newcastle University, 2005.  Conference organizer on Martha Nussbaum’s Hiding from Humanity, Newcastle University, 2006.  Conference organizer on work of Thomas Pogge, Newcastle University, 2006.  Conference organizer on work of , Newcastle University, 2009.  Conference organizer on Martha Nussbaum’s Liberty of Conscience, Newcastle University, 2009.  Conference organizer (with Iain Hampsher-Monk and Sarah Mortimer), Oxford Political Thought Conference, St Catherine’s College, Oxford, 2010.  Conference organizer on ‘Death: Its Meaning, Morality, and Metaphysics’ (with Andrew I. Cohen), Newcastle University, 2011.  Workshop organizer on Mark Bevir’s The Logic of the History of Ideas, University Leicester, 2003. 18

 Workshop organizer on Robert Talisse’s A Pragmatist Philosophy of Democracy, Swansea University, 2008.  Workshop organizer on Brian Leiter’s Naturalizing Jurisprudence, American Philosophical Association—Eastern Division, 2008.  Workshop organizer on capabilities and constitutions, American Philosophical Association—Eastern Division, 2008.  Workshop on Martha Nussbaum’s From Disgust to Humanity, American Philosophical Association—Eastern Division, 2010.  Judge, Brit Writers Awards, 2010.

TEACHING

2004—12 Newcastle University  Undergraduate modules: Contemporary Political Philosophy, Dissertation in Politics, Global Justice, Introduction to Political Theory, Kant and Hegel, Legal Theory, Philosophy and Public Affairs, Political Philosophy Project, Political Thought: The Ancient World and Middle Ages, Political Thought: Hobbes to Marx, Punishment, John Rawls.  Postgraduate modules: Justice, Theories and Approaches in the Study of Politics, Thinking about Political Research.

2012-- Durham Law School

 Undergraduate modules: Criminal Law, UK Constitutional Law

SERVICE

2004—12 Newcastle University

 University Committees: Faculty International Strategy Committee, 2006; Faculty Research Strategy Group, 2009—11; Marketing Professionals’ Forum, 2006; Public Lectures Committee, 2012; Riddell Memorial Lectures Committee, 2012.

 Service to Politics Department: Careers Service Liaison, 2008—12; Curriculum Review Committee, 2004, 2009, 2012; Exams Officer, 2011—12; Executive Board, 2005; Graduate Admissions Committee, 2005—2006; Internationalization Working Group, 2008—2009; Library Liaison, 2008—10, 2011—12; North American Student Exchange Officer, 2004—2006; Open Day representative, 2008—10; Overseas Recruitment Development Officer, 2005—2006; Politics Staff Seminars, 2005—2006; Politics Graduate Student Seminars, 2005—2006; Politics Degree Programme Director, 2008—10; Postgraduate Research Co-Director, 2005—2006; Senior Academic Tutor (Politics), 2008—10; Teaching and Learning Committee, 2008—10; Undergraduate Director (Politics), 2008—10.

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2012-- Durham University

 Service to Law School: Admissions, 2012—.

Graduate Supervision, current and recent

Durham University

Matthew Hann on statelessness and human rights, expected defence 2013. Tom O’Neill on Hobbes and political obligation, expected 2016.

Visiting Scholars (Ph.D. students working with me)

Hugo El Kholi (Sciences Po), the justificatory strategies of global justice norms, expected defence 2013. Reena Kannojiya (Jawaharlal Nehru University), Shankara and Hegel, defended 2009.

Graduate Student Examinations

External Examiner, Ph.D. in Philosophy

Greg Campbell (University College Dublin) on Hegel and violence, 2009. Nicholas Munn (University of Melbourne) on democratic theory, 2010. Mario Solisumana () on anticosmopolitan theories of global justice, 2009. Krushil Watene (University of St Andrews) on the capabilities approach, 2010.

External Examiner, M.St. in Law

Basil Salman (University of Oxford) on negative liberty, 2009.

Internal Examiner, Ph.D. in Politics, Newcastle University

Gary Armstrong on the thought of R. H. Tawney, 2007. Hiro Ishimatsu on multiculturalism and moral sentiments, 2005.

RESEARCH FUNDING

 Overseas Research Scheme Award, 2001—2004.  University of Sheffield Bursary Award, 2001—2004.  European Union Grant for Young Researchers, 2003.  Newcastle University’s Arts and Humanities Research Fund (AHRF) Award (‘Idealism and Punishment’), 2004.  Arts and Humanities Research Council Research (AHRC) Leave Grant (UK) (‘Hegel’s Speculative Politics: Towards a Systematic Reading of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right’), 2007. 20

 Newcastle University’s School of Geography, Politics, and Sociology Research Award (‘British Idealism and the Several Functions Theory of Punishment’), 2008.  Newcastle University’s School of Geography, Politics, and Sociology Research Award (‘British Idealism and Legal Philosophy’), 2009.  Newcastle University’s School of Geography, Politics, and Sociology Research Award (‘Between Statism and Cosmopolitanism: Rethinking Approaches to Global Justice’), 2009—10.  Newcastle University Faculty of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences Research Award, 2010—11.  Newcastle University Faculty of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences Research Award (‘Multiculturalism and Social Renewal’), 2012.  Newcastle University’s School of Geography, Politics, and Sociology Research Award (‘A Bridge between Traditions: New Perspectives on Philosophy and Its Possibilities’), 2012—13.