Results 41 to 50 of about 1,918 (192)
Judicial Review: Substance and Procedure
In this article we distinguish two questions about judicial review. First, substance: what acts or decisions are properly subject to the grounds of review? Second, procedure: what acts or decisions are properly reviewable through the judicial review procedure? Then we settle both.
Adam Perry, Angelo Ryu
wiley +1 more source
Yellow crazy ants (Anoplolepis gracilipes; YCA) are widespread invaders of islands across the Pacific and Indian Oceans. We investigated the ecological preferences and impacts of this species on a Polynesian atoll. We show that even at low abundances, this species can have important impacts on the fauna, including seabirds, and require management ...
Miléna Philip +2 more
wiley +1 more source
ABSTRACT Consent plays an important role in our lives. Using someone's body or property without their consent is typically a serious wrong. However, there are various ways in which consensual interactions may be morally deficient. This paper articulates an underexplored way in which consent can be defective, namely by being moot.
Elise Woodard
wiley +1 more source
Groups as Persons? A Suggestion for a Hegelian Turn
Christian List and Philip Pettit have recently argued for a performative theory of personhood in which all agents who manage to perform in the space of obligations are taken as persons. Based on this account they claim that group agents are also persons.
Hirvonen Onni
doaj +2 more sources
Republicanism, Philosophy of Freedom, and the History of Ideas: An Interview with Philip Pettit [PDF]
Maria Dimova-Cookson: Professor Pettit, thank you very much for agreeing to an interview. There are many things I would like to ask you, but I would start with a question on your republican theory of liberty. This is not only due to the fact that this is where my research interests lie, but because this theory has exerted tremendous influence on ...
openaire +2 more sources
Jean‐Baptiste Say and the Political Economy of Republican Utopia in Revolutionary France
Abstract This article offers a fresh analysis of Olbie (1798), a frequently overlooked essay by the French author and economist Jean‐Baptiste Say (1767–1832). It positions Olbie as a central text for comprehending Say's political thought and situates it within the wider historical context, in particular French republicanism during the 1790s.
MINCHUL KIM
wiley +1 more source
Participação como contestação: a idéia de democracia no neorepublicanismo de Philip Pettit
The main purpose of this article is to analyze the concept of “contestatory democracy” in Philip Pettit’s arguments in favor of the republican tradition of thought.
PPGSP +1 more
core +1 more source
Rousseau's Freedom as Recognition
Abstract To yearn for freedom is to want to be seen by others as someone. Rousseau, I believe, held such a conception of freedom, alongside his intricate theory of human passions. This essay examines how freedom relates to such passions, and in particular, to the Rousseauian notion of amour‐propre.
Julian Perilla
wiley +1 more source

