Nicole J. Hassoun Curriculum Vitae
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Nicole J. Hassoun Curriculum Vitae Binghamton University Philosophy Department P.O. Box 6000 Binghamton, NY 13902-6000 607-777-3725 [email protected] Professional Appointments: • 2018 – Full Professor, Department of Philosophy, Binghamton University • 2012 – 2018 Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy, Binghamton University o 2019- Visiting Scholar, Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies/Cornell Research Academy of Development, Law, and Economics (CRADLE), Cornell University o 2017-2019 Visiting Scholar, Philosophy Department, Cornell University o 2017- Co-Director, Institute for Justice and Well-Being, Binghamton University o 2016-2017 Residential Fellow, The Philosophy of Hope and Optimism, Cornell University o 2015- Affiliate with the Department of Health Outcomes and Administrative Sciences, School of Pharmacy, Binghamton University o 2014 Visiting Researcher, The Franco-Swedish Program in Philosophy and Economics, Paris, France o 2014 Senior Fellow, the Centre for Advanced Studies “Justitia Amplificata: Rethinking Justice – Applied and Global,” Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany o 2013 Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, Binghamton University o 2011 Member of the steering committee of Academics Stand Against Poverty o 2007 Affiliate with the Center for Bioethics and Health Law, University of Pittsburgh • 2007-2012 Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy, Carnegie Mellon University o 2007- 2012 Member of the Center for Ethics and Policy, Carnegie Mellon University o 2007- 2012 Affiliate with the Program on International Relations, Carnegie Mellon University o 2011-2012 Member of the executive committee of the Center for Human Rights Science, Carnegie Mellon University o 2011 Visiting Fellow, the Centre for Advanced Studies “Justitia Amplificata: Rethinking Justice – Applied and Global,” Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany o 2009-2010 Barbara McCoy Postdoctoral Fellow, the Center for Ethics in Society, Stanford University o 2009-2010 (Summer, Winter, and Summer) Visiting Scholar, United Nations’ World Institute for Development Economics Research (http://www.wider.unu.edu/), Helsinki, Finland o 2009 Scholar in Residence, Center for Ethics and Poverty Research, University of Salzburg, Austria • 2005-2006 Visiting Lecturer, Department of Philosophy, UNC Chapel Hill o 2005-2006 Visiting Scholar, Department of Philosophy, Duke University o 2006 Fellow, Parr Center for Ethics, University of North Carolina Education: • Ph.D. Philosophy, University of Arizona, 2007 Dissertation: Shrinking Distance: Globalization and Global Justice Advisor: Thomas Christiano • M.A. Philosophy, University of Arizona, 2005 • B.A. Summa Cum Laude Philosophy, University of Colorado, 2001 Areas of Specialization and Competence: • Social and Political Philosophy, Ethics, Philosophy of Economics • Applied Ethics, Epistemology, Cognitive Science Books • Global Health Impact: Extending Access on Essential Medicines for the Poor, (forthcoming), Oxford University Press: Oxford. • Globalization and Global Justice: Shrinking Distance, Expanding Obligations, (2012), Cambridge University Press: Cambridge. o Honorable Mention for the American Philosophical Association Book Prize: http://www.apaonline.org/?book o Book Symposium: Nicole Hassoun “Beyond Globalization and Global Justice: Development Theory and Practice” Analysis (2014) 74 (1): 119-134 (with introduction and reply to critics from American Philosophical Association author-meets-critics session Gillian Brock, Fernando Teson and Miriam Ronzoni) o New Books in Philosophy interview here. o Special Issue of Public Affairs Quarterly (2014): 28, 3 contains some papers from the MANCEPT session on Globalization and Global Justice o Symposium in Law, Ethics and Philosophy (2014): 2 with extended introduction “Globalization and Global Justice in Review” and reply to critics o Reviewed in Ethics; Philosophical Review; Australian Journal of Political Science; Ethical Theory and Moral Practice; Global Justice: Theory, Practice, Rhetoric; Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews and elsewhere. See, for instance, Kok-Chor Tan’s review essay here: https://oeconomia.revues.org/537. Journal Articles 1. “Global Justice: What is Necessary to Legitimate Coercion,” (2019), Journal of Moral Philosophy, 16, 5: 563-589. 2. “The Human Right to Health: A Defense,” (2019), Journal of Social Philosophy, https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/josp.12298 3. “The State of the Discipline: New Data on Women Faculty in Philosophy" (2019-2020) Ergo, with Sherri Conklin and Irina Artemonova, 6, 30. 4. “Distributing global health resources: Contemporary issues in political philosophy,” with Anders Herlitz, (2019), Philosophy Compass, 14, 11. 5. “Consumption and Social Change,” (2019), Economics & Philosophy, 35, 1: 29-47. 6. “New data on the representation of women in philosophy journals: 2004-2015,” with Sherri Conklin and Isaac Wilhelm, (2018), Philosophical Studies, 175(6):1441-1464. 7. “Fair Trade: An Imperfect Obligation?” (2018). Global Justice: Theory, Practice, Rhetoric. Vol. 10, No. 2. https://www.theglobaljusticenetwork.org/index.php/gjn/article/view/152 Runner up for the Jonathan Trejo-Mathys Essay Prize 8. “The Evolution of Wealth; Democracy or Revolution?” (2018), Wealth, Jack Knight ed., NOMOS, LVIII. 9. “Individual Responsibility for Promoting Global Health: The Case for a New Kind of Socially Conscious Consumption”, (2016), Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics, 44, 2: 319-31. 10. “How People Think about Distributing Aid,” with Nathan Lubchenco and Emir Malikov, (2016), Philosophical Psychology, 29, 7: 1029-1044. 11. “Measuring Health Burden without Discriminating Against the Disabled,” with Lucio Esposito, (2016), Journal of Public Health, doi: 10.1093/pubmed/fdw072 12. “Modeling Key Malaria Drugs' Impact on Global Health: A Reason to Invest in the Global Health Impact Index”, (2016), American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 15-0409. https://www.ajtmh.org/content/journals/10.4269/ajtmh.15-0409 13. “Eternally Separated Lovers: The Argument from Love,” (2015), Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 93(4):633-643. 14. “Coercion, Legitimacy, and Global Justice,” (2015), Journal of Social Philosophy, 46, 2: 178-196. 15. “The Global Health Impact Index: Promoting Global Health,” (2015), PLoS ONE. 10(12): e0141374. DOI: 10.13 16. “The Human Right to Health” (2015), Philosophy Compass, 10, 4: 275–283 17. “Globalization, Global Justice, and Global Health Impact,” (2014), Public Affairs Quarterly, 28, 3: 231-258. 18. “An Aspect of Variable Population Poverty Comparisons: Does Adding a Rich Person to a Population Reduce Poverty?” (2014), Economics and Philosophy, 30, 2: 163-174 previous version “Another Mere Addition Paradox?” available as an UNU WIDER Working Paper at: http://www.wider.unu.edu/publications/working-papers/en_GB/working-papers/ 19. “Coercion, Legitimacy, and Individual Freedom,” (2014), reply to Jorn Sondernholm’s critique of my “World Poverty and Individual Freedom” (American Philosophical Quarterly 2008), Journal of Philosophical Research, 39: 191-198. 20. “Institutional Theories and International Development,” (2014), Global Justice: Theory, Practice, Rhetoric, 7: 12-27 http://dx.doi.org/10.21248/gjn.7.0.44 21. “Conserving Nature; Preserving Identity,” with David Wong, (2014 but appears in 2017), Journal of Chinese Philosophy, Special Supplement to Vol. 41. 22. “Global Justice and Charity: A Brief for a New Approach to Empirical Philosophy,” (2014), Philosophy Compass, 9, 12: 884–893 23. “Human Rights and the Minimally Good Life,” (2013), Res Philosophica, 90, 3: 413-438 (special issue on Well-being other contributors include Richard Kraut, Peter Railton, Erik Angner, Tobias Hoffman and Valerie Tiberius) 24. “An Aspect of Variable Population Poverty Comparisons,” with Subbu Subramanian, (2012), Journal of Development Economics. 98, 2: 238-241. Draft available as a UNU WIDER Working Paper, at: http://www.wider.unu.edu/publications/working-papers/en_GB/working-papers/ 25. “The Problem of Debt-for-Nature Swaps from a Human Rights Perspective,” (2012), Journal of Applied Philosophy, 9, 4: 359-377. 26. “Global Health Impact: A Basis for Labeling and Licensing Campaigns?,” (2012), Developing World Bioethics, 12, 3: 121-134. 27. “Sustaining Cultures in the Face of Globalization,” with David Wong, (2012), Culture and Dialogue, 2, 2: 73-98. 28. “Raz on the Right to Autonomy,” (2011), European Journal of Philosophy, 22, 1: 96–109. 29. “Free Trade, Poverty, and Inequality,” (2011), The Journal of Moral Philosophy, 8, 1: 5-44. 30. “The Anthropocentric Advantage? Environmental Ethics and Climate Change Policy,” (2011), Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, 1, 2: 235-257. 31. “Empirical Evidence and the Case for Foreign Aid,” (2010), Public Affairs Quarterly, 24, 1: 1-20. 32. “Meeting Need,” (2009), Utilitas, 21, 3: 250-275. 33. “Free Trade and the Environment,” (2009), Environmental Ethics, 31, 51-66. o Invited for reprint in Fair Trade and Global Justice: Theoretical Perspectives (Expected contributors include: David Miller, Chandran Kukathas or Hillel Steiner, Daniel Butt, Gillian Brock, and Peter Dietsch) 34. “World Poverty and Individual Freedom,” (2008), American Philosophical Quarterly, 45, 2: 191-198. 35. “Free Trade, Poverty, and the Environment,” (2008), Public Affairs Quarterly, 22, 4: 353-380. 36. “Consciousness and the Moral Permissibility of Infanticide,” with Uriah Kreigle, (2008), Journal of Applied Philosophy, 25,