thom brooks - curriculum vitae

32
THOM BROOKS Professor of Law and Government Dean of Durham Law School Durham University Durham Law School Durham University Durham, DH1 3LE United Kingdom Tel.: +44 (0)191 334 4365 Fax: +44 (0)191 334 2801 Email: [email protected] Website: http://thombrooks.info CITIZENSHIP UK & USA national EDUCATION 199297 B.A., Music and Political Science, William Paterson University, 1997 199799 M.A., Political Science, Arizona State University, 1999 19992000 M.A., Philosophy (1 st class), University College Dublin, 2000 20014 Ph.D., Philosophy, University of Sheffield, 2004 20056 Postgraduate Certificate in Academic Practice, Newcastle University, 2006 EMPLOYMENT 2014Durham University, Chair in Law and Government Inaugural Dean, Durham Law School, 2017Head of School, Durham Law School, 201617 Appointed in Law School, 2012Associate Member, Philosophy Department, 2012Associate Member, School of Government and International Affairs, 20152015 Yale University, Yale Law School, Yale Center for Law and Philosophy, Visiting Fellow 2012Durham University, Reader in Law (Appointed in Law School, Associate in Philosophy) 2012 University of Oxford, St John’s College, Visiting Scholarship 2011 Uppsala University, Department of Government, Visiting Fellow 201011 University of Oxford, Faculty of Philosophy, Academic Visitor 200712 Newcastle University, Politics Department, Reader in Political and Legal Philosophy Thom Brooks is an award-winning author, broadcaster, columnist and senior policy advisor to the Labour Party and the UK’s only Professor of Law and Government . He has 800+ media appearances and frequently comments on national and international television, radio and in print media. Brooks’s work has been cited regularly in Parliamentary debates, he is quoted by the Electoral Commission in support of their recommended changes to the Brexit referendum ballot endorsed by Parliament, he is quoted by the Connecticut’s Supreme Court in Santiago II in support of its ruling that the death penalty is unconstitutional and now being considered in Steskal by the California Supreme Court, he is noted by RCUK as developing one of the top 100 big ideas in British universities and he received the Distinguished Alumni Award from Arizona State University in 2017. As inaugural Dean of Durham Law School, Brooks is leading the most significant transformation in its 50 - year history doubling the School and reaching its best position now ranked 40 th in QS World Rankings 2017 and 93% in the 2017 National Student Survey. Brooks has represented Durham University abroad standing in for the Vice-Chancellor. He lives in County Durham, UK.

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Page 1: Thom Brooks - curriculum vitae

THOM BROOKS

Professor of Law and Government

Dean of Durham Law School

Durham University Durham Law School ♦ Durham University ♦ Durham, DH1 3LE ♦ United Kingdom

Tel.: +44 (0)191 334 4365 ♦ Fax: +44 (0)191 334 2801

Email: [email protected] ♦ Website: http://thombrooks.info

CITIZENSHIP

UK & USA national

EDUCATION

1992—97 B.A., Music and Political Science, William Paterson University, 1997

1997—99 M.A., Political Science, Arizona State University, 1999

1999—2000 M.A., Philosophy (1st class), University College Dublin, 2000

2001—4 Ph.D., Philosophy, University of Sheffield, 2004

2005—6 Postgraduate Certificate in Academic Practice, Newcastle University, 2006

EMPLOYMENT

2014— Durham University, Chair in Law and Government

Inaugural Dean, Durham Law School, 2017—

Head of School, Durham Law School, 2016—17

Appointed in Law School, 2012—

Associate Member, Philosophy Department, 2012—

Associate Member, School of Government and International Affairs, 2015—

2015 Yale University, Yale Law School, Yale Center for Law and Philosophy,

Visiting Fellow

2012— Durham University, Reader in Law (Appointed in Law School, Associate in

Philosophy)

2012 University of Oxford, St John’s College, Visiting Scholarship

2011 Uppsala University, Department of Government, Visiting Fellow

2010—11 University of Oxford, Faculty of Philosophy, Academic Visitor

2007—12 Newcastle University, Politics Department, Reader in Political and Legal

Philosophy

Thom Brooks is an award-winning author, broadcaster, columnist and senior policy

advisor to the Labour Party – and the UK’s only Professor of Law and Government. He

has 800+ media appearances and frequently comments on national and international

television, radio and in print media. Brooks’s work has been cited regularly in

Parliamentary debates, he is quoted by the Electoral Commission in support of their

recommended changes to the Brexit referendum ballot endorsed by Parliament, he is

quoted by the Connecticut’s Supreme Court in Santiago II in support of its ruling that the

death penalty is unconstitutional and now being considered in Steskal by the California

Supreme Court, he is noted by RCUK as developing one of the top 100 big ideas in

British universities and he received the Distinguished Alumni Award from Arizona State

University in 2017. As inaugural Dean of Durham Law School, Brooks is leading the

most significant transformation in its 50-year history doubling the School and reaching its

best position now ranked 40th in QS World Rankings 2017 and 93% in the 2017 National

Student Survey. Brooks has represented Durham University abroad standing in for the

Vice-Chancellor. He lives in County Durham, UK.

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2004—5 University of St Andrews; Centre for Ethics, Philosophy, and Public

Philosophy; Department of Moral Philosophy; Visiting Fellow

2004—7 Newcastle University, Politics Department, Lecturer in Political Thought

NON-ACADEMIC SERVICE

2017 Completed Academic Leadership Programme (ALP) run by Leadership

Foundation for Higher Education

2017 Presented evidence on immigration and integration to All-Party

Parliamentary Group on Social Integration

2017— Columnist, The Independent newspaper

2017— Columnist, The Times newspaper

2017— Member, Deterrence and Assurance Academic Alliance, Ministry of

Defence’s (MOD) Defence Science and Technology Laboratory (Dstl)

2016— Columnist, Daily Telegraph newspaper

2016 Member, BBC One – Look North (North East and Cumbria) roundtable on

future programming

2016— Advisor, Advisory Group, Education4Democracy

2015—17 Member, Community Involvement Panel, Crown Prosecution Service (CPS)

North East

2015—17 Communications Lead, Phil Wilson MP (Labour) and the Sedgefield

Constituency Labour Party

2015 Labour Response Team for General Election 2015

2015—17 Columnist (fortnightly), The Journal (Newcastle) newspaper, the UK’s 2015

regional newspaper of the year

2013 Member, Roundtable on the Prosecution and Punishment of Trolling chaired

by Steve Rotheram MP, Portcullis House, Westminster

2006—9 Trustee, Executive Board member, Political Studies Association

2004— Member, University and College Union (UCU)

2004— Media appearances and interviews – Durham University’s most interviewed

on television and radio since 2013 (800+ appearances overall):

• Television – UK: BBC One, BBC Two (including Newsnight), BBC News, BBC

News Channel, BBC World, ITV (including Good Morning Britain), ITV Tyne Tees,

Channel 5, Sky News, British Forces Broadcasting Service, Made in Tyne and Wear

(including The Week), Tip TV Finance; USA: CNN, CNN International, Reuters TV,

WNET, WTNH; Australia: ABC News; Canada: Bloomberg Canada; China: CGTN,

CCTV China, CCTV America, CNTV, Phoenix TV; France: France 24, NRJ 12;

Gambia: Eye Africa TV; Germany: Deutsche Welle; Qatar: Al Jazeera (including

Inside Story); Russia: RT; Turkey: TRT World; UAE: Al Arabiya, Sky News Arabia

• Newspapers/periodicals – UK: Daily Express, Daily Mail, Daily Mirror, Daily

Telegraph, Durham Times, The Economist, Fabian Review, Financial Times, The

Guardian, The Huffington Post, The Independent, i news, International Business

Times, The Journal (Newcastle), Mail Online, Mail on Sunday, The Metro, Morning

Star, New Europe, New Statesman, Northern Echo, Press Association, Scotsman,

Scotland on Sunday, Sunday Express, Sunday Sun, The Times, Yorkshire Post, Times

Higher Education, The Week; Australia: The Australian, Australian Financial

Review; China: Chinese Social Sciences Today; Colombia: Semana; France: L’Agefi

Hebdo, Les Echos, Lui; Greece: To Vima; Poland: Polish News Agency; Spain: El

Español, Expansión, La Razon; USA: Chronicle of Higher Education, New York

Times, Wall Street Journal, Washington Post among many others.

• Radio – BBC World Service, BBC Radio 4 (including ‘Start the Week’ with Andrew

Marr, ‘World Tonight’ at 10pm and ‘You and Yours’), BBC Radio 5 Live, BBC

Berkshire, BBC Coventry, BBC Cumbria, BBC Derby, BBC Humberside &

Lincolnshire, BBC Leicester, BBC London, BBC Merseyside, BBC Newcastle, BBC

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Northampton, BBC Nottingham, BBC Oxford, BBC Scotland (including Good

Morning Scotland), BBC Sussex, BBC Tees, BBC Wales (including Good Morning

Wales), BBC York, Capital FM, Global Radio, LBC Radio (Nick Ferrari Show), Real

Radio, Lithuanian Public Radio (LRT Radio) and several others.

HONOURS AND AWARDS

Distinguished Alumni Award, School of Politics and Global Studies, Arizona State

University, 2017

University’s Excellence in Learning and Teaching Award, Durham University, 2016

Selected for inclusion in Debrett’s People of Today 2016 edition, 2015

Runner-up for Inspiring Academic Award, Durham Students’ Union, 2015

Shortlisted, Law Teacher of the Year Award, Northern Law Awards, 2015

Law Teacher of the Year, Durham Law School, Durham University, 2015

Lecturer of the Year, Faculty of Social Sciences and Health, Durham Students’

Union, Durham University, 2014

Runner-up for ‘Closing the Loop’ Award, Durham Students’ Union, Durham

University, 2014

Fellow, Higher Education Academy (FHEA), 2014

Outstanding Contributions to Media Award, Faculty of Social Sciences and Health,

Durham University, 2013

Punishment winner of European Sociological Association ‘Book of the Month’, 2012

Fellow, Royal Society of Arts (FRSA), 2012

Fellow, Royal Historical Society (FRHisS), 2010

Fellow, Academy of Social Sciences (FAcSS), 2009

Graduate Essay Prize (‘Is Hegel a Retributivist?’), Hegel Society of Great Britain,

2004

Professor Magennis Memorial Prize, Department of Philosophy, University College

Dublin, 2000

Distinguished Student Award, William Paterson University of New Jersey, 1997

PUBLICATIONS

Books Written

1. Hegel’s Political Philosophy: A Systematic Reading of the Philosophy of Right.

Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2007; paperback 2009; 2nd

edition 2013.

2. Punishment. London: Routledge, 2012 (paperback 2012). Chapter 2 reprinted in

Retribution (2014): 83—104. Chapter 3 reprinted in Deterrence (2014): 117—35.

Chapter 7 reprinted in Sentencing (2014): 417—48. Chapter 10 reprinted in Juvenile

Offending (2014): 97—117. ‘Unified theory’ defended named one of the top 100 Big

Ideas for the Future by Research Councils UK (2011).

3. Becoming British: UK Citizenship Examined. London: Biteback, 2016. (Reviews: Big

Issue, The Observer, Progress magazine).

4. Global Justice: An Introduction. Oxford: Blackwell, under contract.

5. Political Philosophy: The Fundamentals. Oxford: Blackwell, under contract.

Books edited

6. Rousseau and Law. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2005.

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7. The Legacy of John Rawls (with Fabian Freyenhagen). New York and London:

Continuum, 2005 (paperback 2007).

8. Locke and Law. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007.

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

edition, 2014, forthcoming.

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

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

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

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

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

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

16. Rawls and Law. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2012.

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

18. Ethical Citizenship: British Idealism and the Politics of Recognition. Basingstoke:

Palgrave Macmillan, 2014.

19. Law and Legal Theory. Leiden: Brill, 2014.

20. Deterrence. Farnham: Ashgate, 2014.

21. Juvenile Offending. Farnham: Ashgate, 2014.

22. New Waves in Global Justice. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014 (paperback

2014).

23. Retribution. Farnham: Ashgate, 2014.

24. Sentencing. Farnham: Ashgate, 2014.

25. Shame Punishment. Farnham: Ashgate, 2014.

26. Alcohol and Public Policy. London: Routledge, 2015.

27. Rawls’s Political Liberalism (with Martha C. Nussbaum). New York: Columbia

University Press, 2015.

28. Current Controversies in Political Philosophy. London: Routledge, 2015.

29. The Oxford Handbook of Global Justice (edited). Oxford: Oxford University Press,

expected 2017.

30. Hegel’s Political Philosophy: On the Normative Significance of Method and System

(co-edited with Sebastian Stein). Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017.

31. Political Emotions: Towards a Decent Public Sphere. Basingstoke: Palgrave

Macmillan, expected 2017.

Reports Authored

1. The ‘Life in the United Kingdom’ Citizenship Test: Is It Unfit for Purpose? Durham:

Durham University, 2013.

2. A Practical Guide to Living in the United Kingdom: A Report. Durham: Durham

University, 2015.

Research Briefings

3. Punishment, Durham Law School Briefing Document, Durham University, 2013.

4. The Life in the UK Citizenship Test – Is It Unfit for Purpose?, Durham Law School

Briefing Document, Durham University, 2013.

5. Immigration Law and Policy in an Independent Scotland, Durham Law School

Briefing Document, Durham University, 2014.

6. Migration Impacts Reduction Fund, Durham Law School Briefing Document,

Durham University, 2015.

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) on Hegel’s

Philosophy of Right.

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Special issue of Contemporary Social Science 8(1) (2013) on Alcohol and Public Policy.

Special symposium of PS: Political Science and Politics 46(1) (2013) on Climate Change.

Special issue of Public Affairs Quarterly 28(3) (2014) on Globalization and Global Justice.

Special issue of Journal of Value Inquiry (2017) on Death and Its Meaning.

Articles

1. ‘Corlett on Kant, Hegel, and Retribution’, Philosophy 76(298) (2001): 561—580.

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 Authoritarianism’, Politics 22(3) (2002): 152—162.

5. ‘Cosmopolitanism 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—

153.

8. ‘Kant’s Theory of Punishment’, Utilitas 15(2) (2003): 206—224.

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

369.

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

(2003): 426—438.

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—126. Won prize from the Hegel Society of Great Britain.

13. ‘On the Relation between Law and Morality’, Associations: Journal for Legal and

Social Theory 8(1) (2004): 135—139.

14. ‘Hegel’s Theory of International Politics: Reply to Jaeger’, Review of International

Studies 30(1) (2004): 149—152.

15. ‘Retributivist Arguments against Capital Punishment’, Journal of Social Philosophy

35(2) (2004): 188—197.

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—423. Reprinted in

The Right to a Fair Trial. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2009, pp. 225—247. Cited in U.S.

v. Polizzi, 549 F.Supp.2d 308, 452 (E.D.N.Y. 2008).

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

175.

19. ‘Better Luck Next Time: A Comparative Analysis of Socrates 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—245.

22. ‘Herbert Lionel Adolphus Hart’, in Stuart Brown (ed.), Dictionary of Twentieth

Century British Philosophers. Bristol: Thoemmes Continuum, 2005, pp. 389—

391.

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.

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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—488.

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 Plato’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—774.

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—596.

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—1425.

31. ‘No Rubber Stamp: Hegel’s Constitutional Monarch’, History of Political Thought

28(1) (2007): 91—119.

32. ‘Rethinking Punishment’, International Journal of Jurisprudence and Philosophy of

Law 1(1-2) (2007): 27—34.

33. ‘Equality and Democracy: The Problem of Minimal Competency’, Ethical

Perspectives 14(1) (2007): 3—12.

34. ‘Between Natural Law and Legal Positivism: Dworkin and Hegel on Legal

Theory’, Georgia State University Law Review 23(3) (2007): 513—560.

35. ‘Punishing States That Cause Global Poverty’, William Mitchell Law Review 33(2)

(2007): 519—532.

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—428.

38. ‘Ride the Lightning: Why Not Execute Murderers?’ in William Irwin (ed.), Metallica

and Philosophy. Oxford: Blackwell, 2007, pp. 127—134.

39. ‘Shame on Me, Shame on You? Nussbaum on Shame Punishment’, Journal of

Applied Philosophy 25(4) (2008): 322—334. Reprinted in Shame Punishment.

Farnham: Ashgate, 2014, pp. 339—51.

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—669.

43. ‘Bringing the Republic to Life: Teaching Plato’s Republic to First-Year Students’,

Education, Citizenship and Social Justice 3(3) (2008): 211—221.

44. ‘Punishment and Reincarnation: Does One Affect the Other?’, 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—386.

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—232.

48. ‘The Problem with Polygamy’, Philosophical Topics 37(2) (2009): 109—122.

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

pp. 377—390 and The Global Justice Reader, rev. ed. Oxford: Blackwell, 2015,

forthcoming.

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49. ‘Justifying Terrorism’, Public Affairs Quarterly 24(3) (2010): 189—195.

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’ in Duncan Pritchard (ed.), Oxford Bibliographies in

Philosophy. New York: Oxford University Press, 2010.

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

283.

53. ‘The View from the Journal of Moral Philosophy’, American Philosophical

Association Newsletter on Feminism and Philosophy 10(1) (2010): 16—17.

54. ‘The Ideal 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—161.

55. ‘Retribution and Capital Punishment’, in Mark D. White (ed.), Retributivism: Essays

on Theory and Policy. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011, pp. 232—245.

Reprinted in Retribution. Farnham: Ashgate, 2014, pp. 237—250.

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—

438. Chinese translation forthcoming in China Human Rights Review (2018).

59. ‘Respect for Nature: The Capabilities Approach’, Ethics, Policy and Environment

14(2) (2011): 143—146.

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

195—202.

61. ‘Bernard Williams, Republicanism, and the Liberalism of Fear’, Theoretical and

Applied Ethics 1(3) (2011): 57—60.

62. ‘Autonomy, Freedom, and Punishment’, Legal Theory in China 2 (2011): 161—169.

Chinese translation is ‘自主、自由与惩罚’, Legal Theory in China 2 (2011): 154

—160.

63. ‘British Idealism’ in Duncan Pritchard (ed.), Oxford Bibliographies in Philosophy.

New York: Oxford University Press, 2011.

64. ‘Punishment’ in Duncan Pritchard (ed.), Oxford Bibliographies in Philosophy. New

York: Oxford University Press, 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—123.

67. ‘Natural Law Internalism’, in Thom Brooks (ed.), Hegel’s Philosophy of Right.

Oxford: Blackwell, 2012, pp. 167—179.

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 Bioethics 12(6) (2012): 45—46.

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

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

(2012): 560—566.

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—325.

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

76. ‘Punishment and Moral Sentiments’, Review of Metaphysics 66 (2012): 281—293.

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77. ‘James Seth on Natural Law and Legal Theory’, Collingwood and British Idealism

Studies 12(2) (2012): 115—132.

78. ‘Climate Change Justice’, PS: Political Science and Politics 46(1) (2013): 9—12.

79. ‘The Real Challenge of Climate Change’, PS: Political Science and Politics 46(1)

(2013): 34—36.

80. ‘Global Justice and Politics’, in Fred D’Agostino and Jerry Gaus (eds), Routledge

Companion to Social and Political Philosophy. London: Routledge, 2013, pp.

517—525.

81. ‘Alcohol and Public Policy’, Contemporary Social Science 8(1) (2013): 1—7.

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

(2013): 254—266.

83. ‘Should We Nudge Informed Consent?’ American Journal of Bioethics 13(6) (2013):

22—23.

84. ‘In Defence of Political Theory: Impact and Opportunities’, Political Studies Review

11(2) (2013): 209—215.

85. ‘Capabilities’, in Hugh LaFollette (ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Ethics.

Oxford: Blackwell, 2013, pp. 692—698.

86. ‘Citizenship’, in Hugh LaFollette (ed.), The International Encyclopedia of Ethics.

Oxford: Blackwell, 2013, pp. 764—773.

87. ‘The Right to Be Punished’, Legal Theory in China 3 (2013): 21—31. Chinese

translation is ‘权利与刑罚’, Legal Theory in China 3 (2013): 32—39.

88. ‘Government Priorities and Academic Research Funding’, in Transparency

International (ed.), Global Corruption Report: Education. London: Routledge,

2013, pp. 204, 209.

89. ‘Bernard Williams, Republicanism, and the Liberalism of Fear: Problems and

Prospects’, in C. D. Herrera and Alexandra Perry (eds), The Moral Philosophy of

Bernard Williams. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2013,

pp. 107—113.

90. ‘Democracy’ in Duncan Pritchard (ed.), Oxford Bibliographies in Philosophy. New

York: Oxford University Press, 2013.

91. ‘Legal Philosophy’ in Duncan Pritchard (ed.), Oxford Bibliographies in Philosophy.

New York: Oxford University Press, 2013.

92. ‘Legal Positivism and Faith in Law’, Modern Law Review 77(1) (2014): 139—147.

93. ‘The Inevitability of Climate Change’, Global Policy 5(1) (2014): 112—113.

94. ‘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, 2014, pp. 183—203. Reprinted in Sentencing.

Farnham: Ashgate, 2014, pp. 447—465.

95. ‘A New Problem with the Capabilities Approach’, Harvard Review of Philosophy 20

(2014): 100—106.

96. ‘How Global is Global Justice? Towards a Global Philosophy’ in Thom Brooks (ed.),

New Waves in Global Justice. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014, pp. 228—

244.

97. ‘Beyond Retribution’, Think 13(38) (2014): 47—50.

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

Brill, 2014, pp. 149—161.

99. ‘Political Philosophy’ in Michael Bauer (ed.), G. W. F. Hegel: Key Concepts.

London: Routledge, 2014, pp. 76—90.

100. ‘What is Wrong about the “Criminal Mind”?’ Northern Ireland Law Quarterly 65(2)

(2014): 141—151.

101. ‘Remedial Responsibilities beyond Nations’, Journal of Global Ethics 10(2) (2014):

156—166.

102. ‘On F. H. Bradley’s “Some Remarks on Punishment”’, Ethics 125(1) (2014): 223—

225.

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103. ‘Globalization and Global Justice’ Public Affairs Quarterly 28(3) (2014): 193—196.

104. ‘Ethical Citizenship and the Stakeholder Society’ in Thom Brooks (ed.), Ethical

Citizenship: British Idealism and the Politics of Recognition. Basingstoke:

Palgrave Macmillan, 2014, pp. 125—138.

105. ‘Alcohol, Risks and Public Policy’, in Thom Brooks (ed.), Alcohol and Public Policy.

London: Routledge, 2015, pp. 27—33.

106. ‘Equality, Fairness, and Responsibility in an Unequal World’, Symposion 1(2) (2014):

147—153.

107. ‘The Stakeholder Society and the Politics of Hope’, Renewal 23(1/2) (2015): 44—54.

108. ‘Hegel and the Problem of Poverty’, Kilikya Felsefe Dergisi/Cilicia Journal of

Philosophy 1 (2015): 1—9.

109. ‘Why Political Theory Matters’ in Guy Peters, Jon Pierre and Gerry Stoker (eds), The

Relevance of Political Science. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2015, pp.

136—147.

110. ‘Leadership and Stakeholding’ in Jacqueline Boaks and Michael Levine (eds), Ethics

and Leadership. London: Bloomsbury Academic, 2015, pp. 199—210.

111. ‘Preface’ (with Martha C. Nussbaum) in Thom Brooks and Martha C. Nussbaum

(eds), Rawls’s Political Liberalism. New York: Columbia University Press, 2015,

pp. vii—viii.

112. ‘The Capabilities Approach and Political Liberalism’, in Thom Brooks and Martha C.

Nussbaum (eds), Rawls’s Political Liberalism. New York: Columbia University

Press, 2015, pp. 139—173.

113. ‘Alcohol and Controlling Risks Through Nudges’, The New Bioethics 21(1) (2015):

46—55.

114. ‘Involuntary Intoxication: A Six-Step Procedure’, Journal of Criminal Law 79(2)

(2015): 138—146.

115. ‘David Ingersoll, Behavioralism and the Modern Revival of Legal Realism’, Beijing

Law Review 6(3) (2015): 190—192.

116. ‘Why Save the Planet?’ in Thom Brooks (ed.), Current Controversies in Political

Philosophy. London: Routledge, 2015, pp. 138—147.

117. ‘Punishment Précis: An Overview’, Philosophy and Public Issues 5(1) (2015): 3—23.

118. ‘Defending Punishment: Reply to Critics’, Philosophy and Public Issues 5(1) (2015):

73—94.

119. ‘Punitive Restoration: Rehabilitating Restorative Justice’, Raisons Politiques (2015):

65—81.

120. ‘What is the Impact of Political Theory?’ Political Studies Review 13(4) (2015):

500—505.

121. ‘Freedom’ in Duncan Pritchard (ed.), What is This Thing Called Philosophy?

London: Routledge, 2016, pp. 35—51.

122. ‘Justice’ in Duncan Pritchard (ed.), What is This Thing Called Philosophy? London:

Routledge, 2016, pp. 52—67.

123. ‘Global Justice’ in Duncan Pritchard (ed.), What is This Thing Called Philosophy?

London: Routledge, 2016, pp. 68—80.

124. ‘Climate Change Justice through Taxation?’ Climatic Change 133(3) (2015): 419—

426.

125. ‘The EU Migration Crisis: What Next?’ Netherlands Quarterly of Human Rights

34(1) (2016): 4—7.

126. ‘Justice as Stakeholding’ in Krushil Watene and Jay Drydyk (eds), Theorizing

Justice: Critical Insights and Future Directions. New York: Rowman and

Littlefield, 2016, pp. 111—27.

127. ‘Vote Buying and Tax Cut Promises’, Theoria 146 (2016): 20—35.

128. ‘Punitive Restoration: Giving the Public a Say on Sentencing’ in Albert Dzur, Ian

Loader and Richard Sparks (eds), Democratic Theory and Mass Incarceration.

Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016, pp. 140—161.

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129. ‘The immigration debate: Labour versus Leave in the battle to win public trust’ in

Dan Jackson, Einar Thorsen and Dominic Wring (eds), EU Referendum Analysis

2016: Media, Voters and the Campaign. Early reflections from leading UK

academics. Bournemouth: Centre for the Study of Journalism, Culture and

Community, 2016: 85.

130. ‘How Not to Save the Planet’, Ethics, Policy and Environment 19(2) (2016): 119—

135 (target article).

131. ‘In Defence of Punishment and the Unified Theory of Punishment: A Reply’,

Criminal Law and Philosophy 10(3) (2016): 629—638.

132. ‘Beyond Reason: The Legal Importance of Emotions’ (with Diana Sankey) in Patrick

Capps and Shaun D. Pattinson (eds), Ethical Rationalism and the Law (Oxford:

Hart, 2017): 131—148.

133. ‘Is Fair Trade a Fair Deal?’ Cambridge Review of International Affairs 29(2) (2016):

548—561.

134. ‘Labour can overcome its immigration problem’, Renewal 24(4) (2016): 80—88.

135. ‘Unlocking Morality from Criminal Law’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 14(3) (2017):

339—352.

136. ‘Hegel’s Philosophy of Law’ in Dean Moyar (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of Hegel.

Oxford: Oxford University Press (2017): 453—474.

137. ‘Hegel on Crime and Punishment’ in Thom Brooks and Sebastian Stein (eds), Hegel’s

Political Philosophy: On the Normative Significance of Method and System.

Oxford: Oxford University Press (2017): 202—221.

138. ‘Why immigration faded from view in election 2017’ in Einar Thorsen, Daniel

Jackson and Darren Lilleker (eds), UK Election Analysis 2017:Media, Voters and

the Campaign. Bournemouth: Centre for the Study of Journalism, Culture and

Community, 2017: 85

139. ‘Punitive Restoration and Restorative Justice’, Criminal Justice Ethics 36(2) (2017):

122—140.

140. ‘Not Just War: Eisikovits on A Theory of Truces’, Journal of Global Ethics (13(1)

2017): 4—5.

141. ‘Is Eating Meat Ethical?’ Think 47(16) (2017): 9—13.

142. ‘Capabilities, Political Liberalism and Private Law’, Archiv für Rechts- und

Sozialphilosophie 4 (2018), forthcoming.

143. ‘Rethinking the Capabilities Approach’ in The Oxford Handbook of Global Justice.

Oxford: Oxford University Press, (2017) forthcoming.

144. ‘Cultivating Citizenship: On the Importance of Stakeholding’ in (ed.), Political

Emotions: Towards a Decent Public Sphere. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan,

2017, forthcoming.

Articles in Magazines and Newspapers

145. ‘Thought and Deed Born of Idealism’, Times Higher Education Supplement (20

October 2006): 28—29.

146. ‘Defence of the Jury is an Open and Shut Case’, Times Higher Education Supplement

(2 March 2007): 14.

147. ‘Us against Us in the Land of Mahatma’, Times Higher Education Supplement (29

June 2007): 21.

148. ‘Five Secrets to Publishing Success’, InsideHigherEd.Com (15 August 2008).

149. ‘Better Together’, Times Higher Education (10 February 2011): 26.

150. ‘“Observergate” and Academic Freedom’, New Statesman (15 April 2011).

151. ‘A New Approach’, The Philosophers’ Magazine 54 (2011): 110—111.

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

153. ‘A Connecticut Yankee in King Alan’s Court’, Times Higher Education (7 July

2011): 44—46.

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154. ‘Information Lacking for PCC Election’, The Journal (Newcastle) (29 September

2012): 35.

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

156. ‘The Resource Curse and the Separation of Powers’, Ethics and International Affairs

Blog (15 April 2013).

157. ‘UK Citizenship Test is Inconsistent and Riddled with Errors’, The Conversation (14

June 2013).

158. ‘Paper-Hungry Courts Put on Digital Diet’, The Conversation (4 July 2013).

159. ‘The “Life in the UK” Test Has Morphed into a Barrier to Immigration’, The New

Statesman (16 July 2013).

160. ‘Immigration Arrests are Not a Spectator Sport’, The Conversation (5 August 2013).

161. ‘Government should make greater use of university academics as specialist

consultants’, Impact of Social Sciences (23 September 2013).

162. ‘Bad Data Underpins Flawed Health Tourism Report’, The Conversation (23 October

2013).

163. ‘Tories Forget How the Internet Works, Deletegate Reminds Them’, The

Conversation (15 November 2013).

164. ‘“Polish Precedent” Won’t Work to Forecast Future EU Migration’, The

Conversation (23 December 2013).

165. ‘Funders should be Providing Open Access, Not Buying It’, Research Fortnight 405

(30 January 2013): 21.

166. ‘Immigration Ministers Need to Know More about Immigration’, The Conversation

(11 February 2014).

167. ‘Cornish Pasties Must be Added to the UK Citizenship Test’, The Conversation (25

April 2014).

168. ‘On Punitive Restoration’, Demos Quarterly 2 (2014): 41—44 (featured ‘impact

essay’).

169. ‘Criminal Justice at a Crossroads: Why Victims Should Have a Say’, Political

Insight 5(2) (2014): 34—37.

170. ‘If Holyrood Gets More Powers, English Views on Regional Parliaments May

Change’, The Conversation (16 June 2014).

171. ‘Customs at Gretna Green? Neither Side is Telling the Whole Truth on This One’,

The Conversation (10 July 2014).

172. ‘Scottish Independence Referendum: Border Skirmish in the Offing?’ The Journal

(Newcastle) (13 July 2014).

173. ‘One Nation Labour Can Deliver the Britain We Deserve’, Progress Online (29

August 2014).

174. ‘Calais Migrant Crisis Must Be a Problem Shared between France and Britain’, The

Conversation (1 September 2014).

175. ‘Testing Citizenship: The Pub Quiz Problem’, Progress Online (16 September 2014).

176. ‘Devolution: The Time Has Come – but We Must Get It Right’, The Journal

(Newcastle) (23 September 2014): 4—5.

177. ‘See no EVEL’, Progress Online (7 October 2014).

178. ‘Will UKIP be a one-hit wonder?’ The Journal (Newcastle) (27 October 2014): 17.

179. ‘Testing Citizens: Why the UK Citizenship Test Requires Urgent Reforms’, Bright

Blue (17 November 2014).

180. ‘Mr Cameron, don’t make promises that you cannot keep’, The Journal (Newcastle)

(3 December 2014): 23.

181. ‘The biggest worry is the cuts that are still to be revealed’, The Journal (Newcastle)

(12 December 2014): 17.

182. ‘Waiting for a credible message of realistic optimism’, The Journal (Newcastle) (30

January 2015): 18.

183. ‘Labour should lead on reforming citizenship rules’, LabourList (24 February 2015).

184. ‘This election is all about insecurity’, The Journal (Newcastle) (27 February 2015):

23.

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185. ‘Time to revise and relaunch the UK citizenship test’, Progress Online (4 March

2015).

186. ‘New migrant “health surcharge” – an election stunt full of loopholes’, LabourList

(22 March 2015).

187. ‘Why control of immigration is not just for mugs’, LabourList (1 April 2015).

188. ‘The marginals that matter’, The Journal (Newcastle) (11 April 2015): 43.

189. ‘General election 2015: who will win the North East marginals?’, Sunday Sun (3 May

2015): 11.

190. ‘You can already hear the Blairites saying ‘I told you so’—and they might be right’,

The Journal (Newcastle) (11 May 2015): 21.

191. ‘John F. Kennedy was Right. Ask Not What Your Country Can Do for You…’, The

Journal (Newcastle) (29 May 2015): 18.

192. ‘Blairism isn’t about moving right—it’s about doing what’s right’, New Statesman

(18 June 2015).

193. ‘Labour must not be “squeamish” about immigration’, LabourList (18 June 2015).

194. ‘“Unacceptable” scenes in Calais: whose fault is that, Mr Cameron?’ The

Conversation (25 June 2015).

195. ‘Let’s reflect carefully before we leap ahead with another expensive mistake’, The

Journal (Newcastle) (26 June 2015): 22.

196. ‘Australia should tread cautiously on UK-inspired language tests’, The Conversation

(2 July 2015).

197. ‘The Tory budget forgets immigration’, LabourList (16 July 2015).

198. ‘Abstaining on the welfare bill was sensible—Labour must keep its eyes on the prize:

winning’, LabourList (21 July 2015).

199. ‘We’re punching below our weight until we acknowledge Tony Blair’s successes for

our party’, LabourList (23 July 2015).

200. ‘Political parties get the leaders they deserve: on Labour’s leadership contest’, The

Journal (Newcastle) (31 July 2015): 22.

201. ‘The Calais migrant crisis is a bigger problem than you think’, LabourList (1 August

2015).

202. ‘The Calais crisis highlights the poverty of Tory immigration policies’, LabourList (5

August 2015).

203. ‘Some fencing and a few sniffer dogs: it’s not enough’, The Journal (Newcastle) (15

August 2015): 39.

204. ‘The Calais crisis: could it have been averted?’ Middle East Eye (21 August 2015).

205. ‘The Corbyn Factor: is Corbynomics Labour’s Future?’ LabourList (22 August

2015).

206. ‘The government is not taking Calais seriously’, Progress Online (28 August 2015).

207. ‘And the big winner in the Labour leadership contest is…David Cameron’, The

Journal (Newcastle) (29 August 2015): 41.

208. ‘We’ve offered so little to those who have lost so much’, The Journal (Newcastle)

(12 September 2015): 39.

209. ‘Now time for the real campaign—and time to come together’, LabourList (14

September 2015).

210. ‘Don’t let the Northern Powerhouse go the way of the Big Society’, The Journal

(Newcastle) (25 September 2015).

211. ‘A speech for Tory heads’, Progress Online (6 October 2015).

212. ‘Immigrants don’t contribute? Think again, Mrs May’, The Journal (Newcastle) (9

October 2015): 23.

213. ‘The Government’s strategy for tackling extremism is more Little Britain than Big

Society’, The Journal (Newcastle) (22 October 2015).

214. ‘Valuable friends Labour leader did not know he had’, The Journal (Newcastle) (6

November 2015): 23.

215. ‘It won’t be easy, but there are ways we can fight this barbarity’, The Journal

(Newcastle) (19 November 2015): 21.

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216. ‘The trolling and the tweeting is becoming a crisis’, The Journal (Newcastle) (4

December 2015): 23.

217. ‘Let’s stand up for the new politics’, LabourList (4 December 2015).

218. ‘If Cameron wants EU reforms, he should look closer to home’, LabourList (17

December 2015).

219. ‘Government wants us to rat out those who we once loved – but doesn’t tell even tell

us how’, The Journal (Newcastle) (18 December 2015): 21.

220. ‘A house divided cannot stand. Can all these new groups help Labour win?’

LabourList (30 December 2015).

221. ‘I’m gambling on plenty of political twists and turns’, The Journal (Newcastle) (1

January 2016): 19.

222. ‘Breaking up is hard to do—especially when you have to fill out a government form’,

The Conversation (7 January 2016).

223. ‘Cameron’s immigration strategy is to govern through gimmicks’, LabourList (19

January 2016).

224. ‘It’s less “yes, we can” more “well, we tried” from Obama’, The Journal (Newcastle)

(15 January 2016): 23.

225. ‘PMQs: David Cameron must apologise for his “bunch of migrants” comment – it’s

not US vs THEM’, International Business Times (27 January 2016).

226. ‘How Government set us on the road to the red doors’, The Journal (Newcastle) (29

January 2016): 27.

227. ‘Can Labour win on immigration?’ LabourList (2 February 2016).

228. ‘Cameron is over-complicating the EU referendum—Labour must argue to stay in

despite his reforms’, LabourList (3 February 2016).

229. ‘Why is the UK ramping up costs for potential Australian migrants?’ The

Conversation (24 February 2016).

230. ‘Migration will be a political issue…unless we all talk’, The Journal (Newcastle) (26

February 2016): 29.

231. ‘Is the “persona” veiling issues?’ The Northern Echo (2 March 2016): 14.

232. ‘Trump’s success is alarming many Republican voters’, The Journal (Newcastle) (11

March 2016): 27.

233. ‘Brussels attacks: callous Brexit tweeters will lose the battle for hearts and minds’,

The Conversation (22 March 2016).

234. ‘Playing this blame game did each one of us a disservice’, The Journal (Newcastle)

(25 March 2016): 25.

235. ‘The legal war of words over the Calais jungle’, Solicitors Journal 160(12) (29

March 2016): 17.

236. ‘Timing of vote on EU shouldn’t be delaying decisions on immigration’, The Journal

(Newcastle) (8 April 2016): 29.

237. ‘Before and Again: Labour can forge new immigration policies that build on its past

achievements’, Fabian Review 128(1) (Spring 2016): 3.

238. ‘We’re not angry when politicians break promises…it’s what we expect’, The

Journal (Newcastle) (22 April 2016): 27.

239. ‘Immigration: the long and winding road to being British’, Solicitors Journal 160(16)

(26 April 2016): 17.

240. ‘There are lessons to be learned from across The Pond’, The Journal (Newcastle) (6

May 2016): 27.

241. ‘Seeking asylum answers’, Progress Online (10 May 2016).

242. ‘Jury’s very much out on Gove’s plans for prisons’, The Journal (Newcastle) (20

May 2016): 29.

243. ‘The UK citizenship test is becoming like a bad pub quiz and has to change’, The

Journal (Newcastle) (4 June 2016): 27.

244. ‘Where have Cameron’s promised reforms to EU membership gone?’ Solicitors

Journal 160(22) (7 June 2016): 15.

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245. ‘Why immigration could go up after a vote to go it alone’, The Journal (Newcastle)

(17 June 2016): 27.

246. ‘Testing times for citizenship’, Centre Wright 1 (2016) (Bright Blue’s special issue

on ‘The Great Migration’): 32.

247. ‘Telling the real story behind immigration figures’, Solicitors Journal 160(24)

(2016): 17.

248. ‘We can counter the claim that Brexit means taking back control of the UK’s

borders’, LabourList (20 June 2016).

249. ‘A new way forward on immigration,’ Progress Online (30 June 2016).

250. ‘This campaign won on lies has created a poisonous atmosphere’, The Journal

(Newcastle) (1 July 2016): 25.

251. ‘The lack of leadership from the government and the Brexit campaign has been

hugely damaging’, The Journal (Newcastle) (15 July 2016): 25.

252. ‘What should Theresa May do about immigration? A 6-point plan’, Daily Telegraph

(22 July 2016): 20.

253. ‘New dawn and a new politics…a work in progress’, The Journal (Newcastle) (29

July 2016): 25.

254. ‘Don’t grill Byron burger for government’s cheap-as-chips immigration tactics’, The

Conversation (29 July 2016).

255. ‘Don’t grill Byron burger for government’s cheap-as-chips immigration tactics’, i

news (29 July 2016).

256. ‘In the age of Byron Burgers, we are all border agents’, International Business Times

(29 July 2016).

257. ‘Why the arguments for scrapping Trident just didn’t add up’, The Journal (Newcastle) (12 August 2016).

258. ‘Why losing trust in political leaders damages all of us’, The Journal (Newcastle) (26

August 2016): 27.

259. ‘How Labour is failing voters’, Sunday Express (28 August 2016): 26.

260. ‘The Remainers already feel let down. Soon everybody else will’, The Journal

(Newcastle) (9 September 2016): 27.

261. ‘The Tories imitate the US, however they do it badly…’, The Journal (Newcastle)

(23 September 2016): 29.

262. ‘This is personal: why Corbyn was right to pledge to revive the migration impact

fund’, LabourList (29 September 2016).

263. ‘Brexit means what for immigration?’ Progress Online (4 October 2016).

264. ‘Theresa May’s Britain – a new global player or a closed shop?’ The Journal

(Newcastle) (6 October 2016): 25.

265. ‘Clinton will win…but alienation of minority is a fear’, The Journal (21 October

2016): 27.

266. ‘The meaningless mantra of “Brexit means Brexit”’, E!Sharp (29 October 2016).

267. ‘Turning negatives into positives no easy task’, The Journal (8 November 2016):

23—24.

268. ‘When candidates mislead public to win they cause damage’, The Journal (18

November 2016): 25.

269. ‘Tory focus on immigration numbers shows something badly wrong – Labour should

champion a vision to benefit everyone’, LabourList (9 December 2016).

270. ‘Immigration has to work for the whole of society’, The Journal (16 December

2016): 25.

271. ‘I swore an oath to Queen and country. Why must public officials be the only ones to

do the same?’ Daily Telegraph (20 December 2016).

272. ‘A year in which folk suffered shock after shock’, The Journal (30 December 2016):

21.

273. ‘Citizens’ conversation’, Fabian Review 128(4) (Winter 2016): 24—25.

274. ‘As a migrant I know Labour must have a coherent and compassionate policy on

immigration if it is to win again’, LabourList (5 January 2017).

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275. ‘May’s silence has allowed Labour to fill in the gaps’, The Journal (13 January

2017): 27.

276. ‘Bold thinking on integration’, Progress Online (17 January 2017).

277. ‘Our courts are no enemies of the people – they are champions of our liberties’, The

Journal (27 January 2017): 31.

278. ‘Is turning our back on British values the price we must pay for a deal with Trump?’

The Journal (10 February 2017): 25.

279. ‘Here are five ways Theresa May can make immigration work for post-Brexit

Britain’, Daily Telegraph (23 February 2017).

280. ‘Could a register of hate criminals be the solution?’ The Journal (24 February 2017):

27.

281. ‘There’s no way May will walk away with no deal’, The Journal (18 March 2017):

45.

282. ‘I’m known as the Brexit expert who said it would never actually happen’, The

Independent (9 April 2017).

283. ‘May doesn’t have to wait for Brexit to cut immigration’, The Times (11 April 2017).

284. ‘Democracy is not seeing its finest hour – and that should alarm Remainers and

Brexiteers’, The Journal (15 April 2017).

285. ‘How Theresa May ended up to the right of Enoch Powell on immigration’,

LabourList (26 April 2017).

286. ‘Theresa May is driving British citizens out of their own country’, The Independent

(26 April 2017).

287. ‘Driving British citizens out of their own country’, The Gulf Today (26 April 2017).

288. ‘The shock and awe we felt about Donald Trump is now seeping through the United

States’, The Journal (29 April 2017).

289. ‘The three reasons why June might still turn out to be the end of May’, LabourList

(10 May 2017).

290. ‘The manifesto pledge that the Tories never have – and never will – deliver on’, The

Independent (11 May 2017).

291. ‘General Election comes down to a matter of who we can trust the most’, The Journal

(13 May 2017): 45.

292. ‘Net migration is a hollow victory’, The Times (26 May 2017).

293. ‘If the public really does lose all faith in its politicians, where do we go then?’ The

Journal (27 May 2017): 53.

294. ‘May must reassemble the Brexit team in a grand, all-party coalition’, The Times (14

June 2017).

295. ‘May should put Brexit talks on hold and bring Labour on board for advice’,

LabourList (19 June 2017)

296. ‘Theresa May just quietly made a sinister deal about EU citizens which puts us on a

fast track to a bad Brexit’, The Independent (26 June 2017).

297. ‘Labour is on a roll – so let’s abandon the old divisions and work together for

victory’, LabourList (28 June 2017).

298. ‘Saying “Brexit means Brexit” was the easy part’, The Times (3 July 2017).

299. ‘Mrs May must urgently address the exodus of UK citizens or risk undermining

Brexit’s potential’, Daily Telegraph (24 August 2017).

300. ‘PM’s secret Brexit immigration plans are mostly gimmicks to fool public’,

Huffington Post (7 September 2017).

301. ‘The 52 percent did not vote for this: why Labour is right to oppose the Brexit bill’,

LabourList (8 September 2017).

302. ‘The silly season is over and it’s time for May to make way’, The Times (8 September

2017).

303. ‘The Home Office makes huge profits from immigrants. So where is the money going

to?’ The Independent (13 September 2017).

304. ‘Leavers like Boris Johnson harm their Brexit cause more than their critics’,

Huffington Post (18 September 2017).

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305. ‘Reforming the justice system is not Old or New Labour – it is essential for today’,

LabourList (6 October 2017).

306. ‘If Brexit can be stopped, why won’t the PM consider it?’ Huffington Post (10

October 2017).

307. ‘Chris Heaton-Harris can keep his letter – my university is for free thought and

debate’, Huffington Post (24 October 2017).

308. ‘Demanding universities name their Brexit teachers is a bizarre attack on academic

freedom’, The Daily Telegraph (24 October 2017).

309. ‘Students must learn to think for themselves about Brexit, whatever snooping MPs

think’, i news (24 October 2017).

310. ‘Bringing Labour into a grand coalition team would give May new options in Brexit

talks’, The Times (9 November 2017).

311. ‘Universities minister must stand up for academic freedom now under threat from

government whip’, Huffington Post (10 November 2017).

312. ‘Boris and Gove’s treatment of British mum in Iran shows they betray our citizens’,

LabourList (13 November 2017).

313. ‘Some advice for Meghan Markle on how to pass the UK citizenship test’, Huffington

Post (28 November 2017).

314. ‘We can detoxify the immigration debate by making fees on migrants more

transparent’, LabourList (1 December 2017). 315. ‘May’s migration pledge is a poisoned chalice but Labour can regain public trust’,

LabourList (5 December 2017).

316. ‘The biggest Brexit headache for May could be citizenship’, The Times (6 December

2017). 317. ‘Immigration report step in right direction, but unlikely to get government to change

course’, Huffington Post (18 January 2018).

Other essays

318. ‘Publishing Advice for Graduate Students’ (2008). Downloaded 16,200 times on the

Social Science Research Network (SSRN) since December 2005 and ranked 105th

of 561,107 full-text papers in downloads all-time.

319. ‘Guidelines on How to Referee’ (2010). Downloaded over 2,200 times on the Social

Science Research Network (SSRN) since December 2010.

Editorials

320. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 1(1) (2004): 7—8.

321. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 1(3) (2004): 263.

322. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 2(1) (2005): 7.

323. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 2(3) (2005): 263.

324. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 3(3) (2006): 263.

325. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 4(1) (2007): 7.

326. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 5(2) (2008): 177.

327. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 6(1) (2009): 3.

328. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 7(2) (2010): 157.

329. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 8(1) (2011): 3—4.

330. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 8(4) (2011): 493.

331. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 9(2) (2012): 145—146.

332. ‘Editorial’, Journal of Moral Philosophy 9(4) (2012): 485—489.

Book Reviews, a selection

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333. On Voluntary Servitude: False Consciousness and the Theory of Ideology, by

Michael Rosen, for International Journal of Philosophical Studies 9(1) (2000):

116—117.

334. Political Psychology: Cultural and Crosscultural Foundations, edited by Stanley A.

Renshon and John Duckitt, for International Journal of Philosophical Studies

9(4) (2001): 555—558.

335. The Logic of the History of Ideas, by Mark Bevir, for International Journal of

Philosophical Studies 10(4) (2002): 505—506.

336. Building Democracy in South Asia: India, Nepal, Pakistan, by Maya Chadda, for

Democratization 9(4) (2002): 191—193.

337. Kantian Moral Theory and the Destruction of the Self, by Sandra Jane Fairbanks, for

Ethics 113(2) (2003): 458—459.

338. Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason and Metaphysics: Concepts and Problems, by

Theodor W. Adorno, for Philosophy in Review 23(3) (2003): 160—163.

339. The Unity of Hegel’s Phenomenology of Spirit: A Systematic Interpretation, by Jon

Stewart, for International Journal of Philosophical Studies 11(4) (2003): 489—

491.

340. Hegel and the Philosophy of Right, by Dudley Knowles, for British Journal for the

History of Philosophy 12(3) (2004): 559—563.

341. 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).

342. Hegel, Nietzsche, and Philosophy: Thinking Freedom, by Will Dudley, for

Philosophy 79(307) (2004): 149—153.

343. T. H. Green and the Development of Ethical Socialism, by Matt Carter, for Political

Studies Review 2(3) (2004): 357—358.

344. Reason without Freedom: The Problem of Epistemic Normativity, by David Owens,

for International Journal of Philosophical Studies 12(4) (2004): 513—515.

345. The British Constitution in the Twentieth Century, ed. Vernon Bogdaner, for Law and

Politics Book Review 15(6) (2005): 531—536.

346. T. H. Green: The Philosophical Foundations of Politics, by Colin Tyler, for Bulletin

of the Hegel Society of Great Britain 51/52 (2005): 141—144.

347. Dworkin and His Critics, edited by Justine Burley, Modern Law Review 69(1) (2006):

140—142.

348. The State of Democratic Theory, by Ian Shapiro, for Ethics 116(2) (2006): 442—444.

349. Debates in Indian Philosophy: Classical, Colonial, and Contemporary, by A.

Raghuramaraju, for Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews (2007).

350. 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—197.

351. 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.

352. Punishment and Retribution, by Leo Zaibert, for New Criminal Law Review 10(2)

(2007): 311—314.

353. Hiding from Humanity: Disgust, Shame, and the Law, by Martha Nussbaum, for

Journal of Applied Philosophy 24(3) (2007): 329—331.

354. Rethinking Imprisonment, by Richard Lippke, for Ethics 118(3) (2008): 562—564.

355. Advice and Consent: The Politics of Judicial Appointments, by Lee Epstein and

Jeffrey Segal, for Political Studies Review 6(1) (2008): 93—94.

356. Kant’s ‘Groundwork of the Metaphysics of Morals’: A Commentary, by Jens

Timmermann, for Political Studies Review 6(3) (2008): 380—381.

357. Liberty of Conscience: In Defense of America’s Tradition of Religious Equality, by

Martha C. Nussbaum, for Times Higher Education (17 April 2008): 47.

358. Killing Civilians in War, by Jeff McMahan, for Times Higher Education (8 October

2009): 47.

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359. British Idealism: A History, by W. J. Mander, for Times Higher Education (14 July

2011): 51.

360. So You Want to be a Politician?, edited by Shane Greer, for Times Higher Education

(11 October 2012): 47.

361. German Idealism and the Concept of Punishment, by Jean-Christophe Merle, for

European Journal of Philosophy 20(1) (2012): 179—182.

362. Modernity in Indian Social Theory, by A. Raghuramaraju, for Notre Dame

Philosophical Reviews (2012).

363. The Lost Age of Reason: Philosophy in Early Modern India 1450-1700, by Jonardon

Ganeri, for Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews (2013).

364. The Tyranny of Utility: Behavioral Social Science and the Rise of Paternalism, by

Gilles Saint-Paul, for Perspectives on Politics 11(1) (2013): 279—280.

365. Legality, by Scott J. Shapiro, for Times Higher Education (7 February 2013): 47.

366. Conscience and Conviction: The Case for Civil Disobedience, by Kimberley

Brownlee, for Law and Philosophy 33 (2014): 137—141.

367. Crime, by Nick Ross, for Progress Online (2014).

368. Reforming Justice: A Journey to Fairness in Asia, by Livingston Armytage, for

Journal of Human Development and Capabilities, forthcoming.

369. Recidivist Punishments, edited by Claudio Tamburrini and Jesper Ryberg, for Law

and Politics Book Review, forthcoming.

370. Simpler: The Future of Government, by Cass R. Sunstein, for Times Higher

Education (11 June 2015): 53.

371. Would They Lie to You? How to Spin Friends and Manipulate People, by Robert

Hutton, for Times Higher Education (18 June 2015): 47 and (22 October 2015):

45.

372. Why Vote Labour: The Essential Guide, edited by Dan Jarvis, for Times Higher

Education (21 January 2016): 46.

373. Bottlenecks: A New Theory of Equal Opportunity, by Joseph Fishkin, for Political

Studies Review 14(2) (2016): 243.

374. Liberal Rights and Responsibilities: Essays on Citizenship and Sovereignty, by

Christopher Heath Wellman, for Political Studies Review 14(2) (2016): 251.

375. Confronting Injustice: Moral History and Political Theory, by David Lyons, for

Philosophical Quarterly, forthcoming.

376. The Free Development of Each: Studies on Freedom, Right, and Ethics in Classical

German Philosophy, by Allen W. Wood, for Hegel Bulletin 37(2) (2016): 344—

346.

PAPERS READ, a selection

Keynote, Plenary and Public Lectures

Invited speaker, Café Philosophique, Newcastle upon Tyne, 2011.

‘Thom Brooks in conversation with Mary Midgley’, The Northern Stage, Newcastle

upon Tyne, 2011.

Invited speaker, Festival of Philosophy, Newcastle upon Tyne, 2011.

Invited speaker, ‘The Politicisation of Higher Education—Question Time’, House of

Commons Committee Room, Westminster, 2011.

Invited speaker, Identity and Migration on Tyneside event, Tyneside Irish Centre,

Newcastle upon Tyne, 2011.

Invited speaker, Institute for Public Policy Research—North, Newcastle upon Tyne,

2011.

Invited speaker, Glasgow Skeptics, 2012.

Invited speaker, ‘Britain 2015: Is There a New Centre Ground and How Does Labour

Capture It?’, Sunderland Civic Centre, 2012. Organised by Progress.

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‘Thom Brooks in conversation with David Miliband’, Newcastle University, 2012.

Author Meets Critics panel on my Punishment book with speakers Lord Bhikhu

Parekh FBA, Baroness Vivien Stern CBE and Frances Crook OBE in the Houses of

Parliament, 2013.

Castle Cutting Edge Lecture, University College (Durham Castle), Durham

University, 2013.

Plenary Lecture, Political Studies Association—Political Thought Group annual

conference, Kings’ College London, 2013.

Invited speaker, Edinburgh Fringe Festival, 2013.

Invited speaker, Durham Book Fair, 2013.

Invited speaker, Durham University Labour Party Club, 2013.

Invited speaker on the death penalty, Durham University Amicus-Amnesty

International Club, 2013.

Insights Public Lecture, Newcastle University, 2013.

Invited speaker on private law and the capabilities approach, Centre for the Study of

European Contract Law, Law School of the University of Amsterdam, the

Netherlands, 2014.

Invited speaker on Life in the United Kingdom citizenship test, Ustinov College,

Durham University, 2014.

Invited speaker, Justice in a Global Age conference, University College, Durham

University, 2014.

Invited speaker on the capabilities approach and public policy reform, University of

Leeds, 2014.

Invited speaker on Hegel and stakeholding, Hegel Society of Great Britain annual

conference, Magdalen College, Cambridge, 2014.

Inaugural lecture, University College (Durham Castle), Durham University, 2014.

Invited speaker on the death penalty, Durham University Amicus-Amnesty

International Club, 2014.

Invited speaker on political theory and its impact, Houses of Parliament, 2015.

Keynote Address, ‘Between Theology and the Political’ conference, Department of

Religions and Theology & Lincoln Theological Institute, University of Manchester,

2015.

Author Meets Critics conference on my Punishment book at LUISS, Italy, 2015.

Philosophy Matters Public Lecture, ‘Why Hegel Matters’, Ashmolean Museum,

Oxford, 2015.

Invited speaker, Magna Carta symposium, Centre for Global Constitutionalism,

School of International Relations, University of St Andrews, 2015.

Invited speaker, Newcastle Constituency Labour Party—Jesmond Branch, Jesmond

Cricket Club, Newcastle upon Tyne, 2015.

Invited speaker, Liberteas event (devised and led by the Houses of Parliament)

on citizenship and the Magna Carta, Palace Green Library, Durham, 2015.

Author meets critics panel on my Rawls’s Political Liberalism (co-edited with

Martha C. Nussbaum), University of Milan, Italy, 2015.

Invited speaker on Immigration and Justice workshop, DIReCT, University of Milan,

Italy, 2015.

Invited speaker, Normative Interventions conference on relation between political

theory and political practice, University College London, 2016.

Public Lecture, Social Futures Institute, Teesside University, 2016.

Invited speaker, Immigration Panel, Stockton area Labour Party, Stockton on Tees,

2016.

Invited speaker on British citizenship, Durham University Philosophy, Politics and

Economics Society, Durham University, 2016.

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Invited speaker on the death penalty, Durham University Amicus-Amnesty

International Club, 2016.

Keynote speaker, on philosophy of punishment, 6th Annual Workshop in Applied

Ethics, Bowling Green State University, USA, 2016.

Invited public lecture on British citizenship law and policy, ‘Métropoles et metalités’

conference hosted by Collège des Benardins, Paris Sorbonne and Sciences Po,

France, 2016.

Invited speaker, on the EU referendum and on the US Presidential elections and

potential impact on trade, International Trade Committee, North East Chamber of

Commerce, Durham County Cricket Club, Chester le Street 2016.

Invited speaker, UK citizenship test, TEDx, Durham University, 2016.

Invited speaker, Durham Union Society, 2016.

Invited speaker, Britishness workshop, Ustinov College, Durham University, 2016.

Invited speaker, EU referendum debate, St Chad’s College, Durham University, 2016.

Invited public lecture on UK citizenship test, Café Culture, Newcastle upon Tyne,

2016.

Invited speaker, on punitive restoration, The Theory and Practice of Punishment East

and West, City University of Hong Kong, China, 2016.

Invited speaker, Newcastle Labour Party, 2017.

Invited speaker, Durham Labour Party, 2017.

Invited speakers, Unison Ambassadors Group, Unison Northern Region

Headquarters, 2017.

Invited speaker, All-Party Parliamentary Group on Refugees, Houses of Parliament,

2017.

Invited speaker, Sedgefield Labour Party, 2017.

The Distinguished Alumnus Public Lecture, Arizona State University, 2017.

US book launch signing, R J Julia Booksellers, Connecticut, 2017. Recent authors

prior to visit include Hillary Clinton, John McCain and Julie Andrews.

Public lecture, Durham Alumni Networking Event on General Election 2017, London

Marriott County Hall, 2017.

Invited public lecture, Newcastle: City of Sanctuary, Newcastle City Library, 2017.

Invited speaker, Show Racism the Red Card, Unison Northern Region Headquarters,

2017.

Invited speaker, Global Security and Stability Conference, Intercontinental London –

The O2, 2017. Fellow panellists included James Rubin, Bill Richardson and John

Simpson.

Invited speaker, Brexit Britain: challenges and opportunities for the City roundtable,

hosted by Fabian Society and City of London Corporation, Labour Party conference

fringe, Brighton, 2017.

Invited Seminar Presentations

Ockham Society, University of Oxford, UK, 21 October 2003.

Political Theory Workshop, University of Sheffield, UK, 11 February 2004.

Politics Department, Newcastle University, UK, 6 May 2004.

Political Theory Workshop, University of York, (UK, 25 October 2005.

IPPE Seminar, Lancaster University, UK, 14 December 2005.

Politics Department, Edinburgh University, UK, 18 October 2006.

Philosophy Department, Glasgow University, UK, 7 November 2006.

Departments of Philosophy, University of St Andrews, UK, 15 March 2007.

School of Philosophy, University College Dublin, Ireland, 4 April 2007.

International Politics Seminar, Politics Department, Newcastle University, 26

October 2007.

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Oxford Jurisprudence Discussion Group, University College, Oxford, UK, 29

November 2007.

Department of Policy Studies, University of Lincoln, UK, 22 May 2008.

Politics Department, Cardiff University, UK, 20 November 2008.

Philosophy Department, Durham University, UK, 5 February 2009.

Political Philosophy Group, University of Stirling, UK, 25 March 2009.

Ethics Group, Boston University, USA, 18 December 2009.

Philosophy Society, Edinburgh University, UK, 11 March 2010.

Newcastle Law School, UK, 2 June 2010.

Philosophy Society, Edinburgh University, UK, 23 September 2010.

Philosophy Department, Oxford Brookes University, UK, 6 October 2010.

Centre for Ethics, Law and Public Affairs, University of Warwick, UK, 2 November

2010.

Yale Working Group in Moral Philosophy, Yale University, USA, 19 April 2011.

Ethics Colloquium, Groningen University, Netherlands, 15 November 2011.

Faculty of Philosophy, Groningen University, Netherlands, 16 November 2011.

Philosophy Society, Edinburgh University, UK, February 2012.

Law School, Durham University, UK, 30 July 2012.

Edinburgh Legal Theory Research Group, Law School, Edinburgh University, UK,

2013.

School of Philosophy, University College Dublin, Ireland, 2013.

Collingwood College, Durham University, UK, 2013.

Philosophy Society, Edinburgh University, UK, 26 September 2013.

School of Politics, Economics and Philosophy/Political Theory Workshop, University

of York, UK, 15 October 2013.

Hatfield College, Durham University, UK, 6 November 2013.

Centre for Law and Society, Law School, Edinburgh University, UK, 28 November

2013.

Institute of Applied Ethics, University of Hull, UK, 11 February 2014.

Department of Philosophy, Durham University, UK, 13 February 2014.

Political Science Faculty, Sciences Po, Paris, France, 27 March 2014.

Department of Philosophy, Open University, UK, 2 April 2014.

Department of Politics, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (KUL), Belgium, 2014.

Department of Philosophy, Mary Immaculate College, University of Limerick,

Republic of Ireland, 2014.

School of Philosophy, University College Dublin, Republic of Ireland, 2014.

All Souls Criminology Seminar Series, Faculty of Law, University of Oxford, All

Souls College, UK, 5 February 2015.

LUISS, Rome, Italy, 9 April 2015.

Philosophy, Mercin University, Turkey, 21 April 2015.

Law, University of Chester, UK, 30 April 2015.

Department of Philosophy, Johns Hopkins University, USA, 2 November 2015.

School of Global Politics, Arizona State University, USA, 10-12 November, 2015.

Philosophy Department, Vanderbilt University, 16 November 2015.

Philosophy Department, Suffolk University, USA, 17 November 2015.

Harvard Political Theory Colloquium, Harvard University, USA, 19 November 2015.

Legal and Political Theory Seminar, University College London, UK, 27 January

2016.

School of Politics and Global Studies, Arizona State University, 18 April 2017.

Center for Global Ethics and Politics, City University of New York, USA, 4 April

2017.

Department of Philosophy, Durham University, 12 October 2017.

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Department of Philosophy, University College Cork, Republic of Ireland, autumn

2017.

Conferences and Workshops, 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.

Invited comment on Sharon Cowan, Criminalization Workshop, University of

Stirling, 2005.

Invited comment on Chris Megone, Society for Applied Philosophy, St Anne’s

College, Oxford, 2005.

Reply to Michael Davis, Online Philosophy Conference, 2006.

Invited comment on Joel Rickard, Problems and Prospects for Ethical Naturalism

conference, Durham University, 2006.

Invited paper for session on negative and positive freedom, Café Culture, Newcastle

upon Tyne, 2007.

Invited comment on Yirmiyahu Yovel, Hegel Society of Great Britain, St Edmund

Hall, Oxford, 2007.

Comment on Robert Talisse, Political Studies Association, Swansea University, 2008.

Invited comment on David Miller, Centre for the Study of Mind in Nature, University

of Oslo, 2008.

Invited paper on publishing advice for graduate conference, Political Studies

Association, 2004 and 2009.

Invited participant in roundtable on work of James Wilson, St Andrews, 2009.

Invited paper on journal editing, American Philosophical Association—Eastern

Division, 2009.

Invited paper for session on women and journal publishing, American Philosophical

Association—Eastern Division, 2009.

Invited participant in roundtable on moral foundations of a free society, Cambridge,

2010.

Invited comment on Loren Lomasky and Fernando Teson, Georgia State University,

2010.

Invited paper on just war theory, Carlsberg Akademi, Copenhagen, 2010.

Invited comment on Jonathan Wolff, University of Oslo, 2010.

Invited comment on Shannon Hoff, American Philosophical Association—Eastern

Division, 2010.

Invited speaker at Academic Stand Against Poverty (ASAP) UK launch, University

of Birmingham, 2011.

Invited paper on criminal justice and punishment, Cardiff University, 2011.

Invited paper on the current state of academic philosophy, Institute of Philosophy,

School of Advanced Study, University of London, 2012.

Invited speaker on fairness and responsibility in an unequal society, Senate House,

University of London, 2012.

Invited speaker on criminal law and sentencing workshop, Carlsberg Akademi,

Copenhagen, 2012.

Invited paper on James Seth and legal theory, British Idealism conference, University

of Hull, 2012.

Paper on public opinion and sentencing, Socio-Legal Studies Association, University

of York, 2013.

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Paper on the idea of a stakeholder society, British Idealism conference, Harris

Manchester College, Oxford, 2013.

Paper on punitive restoration and sentencing, Society for Legal Scholars annual

conference, Edinburgh, 2013.

Paper on stakeholding and justice, Society for Legal Scholars annual conference,

Edinburgh, 2013.

Invited speaker on creating academic impact, Society for the Advancement of

Management Studies, Durham University Business School, 2013.

Paper on punitive restoration and sentencing, Howard League for Penal Reform

conference, Keble College, Oxford, 2013.

Invited speaker, Nussbaum and Her Critics conference, St Mary’s College, Durham

University, 2014.

Paper on the Life in the United Kingdom citizenship test, Society of Legal Scholars

conference, University of Nottingham, 2014.

Invited speaker on global justice, Centre for the Study of Mind in Nature, University

of Oslo, Norway, 2015.

Paper on the UK immigration rules for ‘good citizenship’ and its reform, Society of

Legal Scholars conference, University of York (UK), 2015.

Invited speaker at Global Justice: New Directions in Research and Advocacy

conference, Ghent University, Belgium, 2015.

Invited speaker, Normative Interventions conference, University College London,

2016.

Invited speaker, Border Security Aspects of International Security, Professional

Certificate Course in International Security, International Centre for Parliamentary

Studies, London, 2016. Past speakers include former UK Prime Minister David

Cameron and former Danish PM Helle Thorning-Schmidt.

Paper on problems with Ronald Dworkin’s legal principles, Society of Legal Scholars

conference, University of Oxford, 2016.

Paper on the varieties of natural law theories, Society of Legal Scholars conference,

University College Dublin, 2017.

PROFESSIONAL ORGANIZATIONS, a selection

American Philosophical Association (APA), member since 2001.

o Member, Subcommittee on Journal Practices, 2010—11.

o Chair, Committee on Philosophy and Law, 2009—12.

o Member, Committee on Philosophy and Law, 2007—12.

American Political Science Association (APSA), member since 2011.

American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy, member since 2009.

Aristotelian Society, member since 2001.

Association for Political Thought (UK)

o Founding Secretary, 2008—12.

Association for Philosophy Journal Editors, member since 2009.

o Co-Chair, 2009—12.

British Philosophical Association, member since 2003.

Hegel Society of America, member since 2004.

Hegel Society of Great Britain, member since 2001.

o Conference Organizer, 2004—10, 2013.

o Council Member, since 2006.

Howard League for Penal Reform, member since 2014.

Human Development and Capability Association, member since 2010.

Newcastle Ethics, Legal and Political Philosophy (NELPP) Group, member 2004—

12.

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o Chair, 2004—11.

Political Studies Association, member since 2003.

o Executive Board, 2006—9.

Chair, Awards and Prizes Subcommittee, 2006—8.

Chair, Specialist Groups Subcommittee, 2009.

Member, Education Subcommittee, 2006—9.

o British Idealism PSA specialist group, member since 2004.

Treasurer and Membership Secretary, 2012—15.

o Elections, Public Opinion and Parties PSA specialist group, member since

2011.

o Global Justice and Human Rights PSA specialist group, member since 2007.

Founding Chair, 2007—11.

Society of Legal Scholars, member since 2012.

o Executive Committee, since 2013.

Socio-Legal Studies Association, member since 2012.

RESEARCH CENTRE MEMBERSHIP

Centre for Criminal Law and Criminal Justice (CCLCJ), Durham University, member

since 2012; director, 2014—16; seminar series organiser, 2013—16.

Centre for Ethics, Law and the Life Sciences (CELLS), Durham University, member

since 2012.

Centre for the History of Philosophy (CHiPhi); Leeds, Sheffield and York

universities; associate member since 2009.

Centre for Political Thought, Durham University, member since 2012.

Centre for Institutions and Political Behaviour, Durham University, member since

2014.

Gender and Law at Durham (GLAD), Durham University, member since 2012.

Global Policy Institute (GPI), Durham University, Fellow since 2014.

Human Rights Centre (HRC), Durham University, member since 2012.

Institute for Applied Ethics, University of Hull, Associate Member since 2014.

Law and Global Justice (LGJ), Durham University, member since 2013.

The Scottish Centre for Crime and Justice Research (SCCJR), Associate Member

since 2012.

OTHER PROFESSIONAL ACTIVITIES (a selection)

Editorial Boards

Editor and founder, Journal of Moral Philosophy, 2003—12

Associate Editor, Journal of Moral Philosophy, 2013—

Editor and founder, Review Journal of Political Philosophy, 2003

Advisory Editor, University of Bologna Law Review, 2016—

Editorial Boards (19):

Civil American, 2017—

Contemporary Social Science, 2011—

Hegel Bulletin (Bulletin of the Hegel Society of Great Britain), 2009—

Inonu University Law Journal, 2015—

Istanbul Medeniyet University Science Journal, 2017—

Journal of Bioethics and Applications, 2017—

Journal of Criminal Law, 2015—

Journal of Global Ethics, 2013—

Journal of Moral Philosophy, 2003—

Kilikya Felsefe Dergisi/Cilicia Journal of Philosophy, 2014—

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Law, Crime, Justice and Society, 2014—

Laws, 2015—

Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews, 2011—

Philosophical Writings, 2006—

Philosophy Study, 2017—

Public Affairs Quarterly, 2009—11

Review Journal of Political Philosophy, 2003

Symposion, 2014—

University of Bologna Law Review, 2016—

Book Series Editorships

Bloomsbury Ethics (with Simon Kirchin), Bloomsbury Academic, 2009—.

Crime and Punishment: Critical Essays in Legal Philosophy, Ashgate, 2012—14.

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.

Editorial board member for book series Studies in Global Justice, Springer, 2014—.

Editorial board member for book series On Ethics and Economics, Rowman &

Littlefield International, 2014—.

Manuscript Refereeing

Manuscript referee for 86 different national and international academic journals:

Law journals (13) include Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy; Canadian Journal

of Law and Jurisprudence; Criminal Law and Philosophy; Criminology and Criminal

Justice; Griffith Law Review; Harvard Law Review; International Journal of Law and

Politics; International Journal of Law in Context; Law and Philosophy; Law and

Society Review; Laws; Legal Studies; New Criminal Law Review.

Philosophy journals (39) include Australasian Journal of Philosophy; British Journal

for the History of Philosophy; Diametros; Ethical Theory and Moral Practice; Ethics;

Ethics and International Affairs; European Journal of Philosophy; The European

Legacy; History of Philosophy Quarterly; Inquiry; International Journal of

Philosophical Studies; International Journal of Philosophy and Theology; Journal of

Applied Philosophy; Journal of Bioethical Inquiry; Journal of Ethics and Social

Philosophy; Journal of Global Ethics; Journal of Moral Philosophy; Journal of

Philosophical Research; Journal of Philosophy; Journal of Practical Ethics; Journal

of Social Philosophy; Journal of the Philosophy of History; Kant Studies Online;

Medicine, Health Care and Philosophy; Monist; Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews;

Philosophia; Philosophical Papers; Philosophical Psychology; Philosophical

Quarterly; Philosophical Studies; Philosophical Writings; Philosophy East and West;

Philosophy and Public Issues; Politics, Philosophy, and Economics; Public Affairs

Quarterly; Social Theory and Practice; Southern Journal of Philosophy; Theoria.

Politics journals (25) include African Journal of Political Science and International

Relations; American Journal of Political Science; British Journal of Politics and

International Relations; Canadian Journal of Political Science; Contemporary

Political Theory; Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy;

Environmental Politics; European Journal of International Relations; European

Journal of Political Theory; History of Political Thought; International Theory;

Journal of International Relations and Development; Millenium; Oxford

Bibliographies in Political Science; Perspectives on Politics; Political Studies;

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Political Studies Review; PolSci: The Romanian Journal of Political Science;

Politics; Politics and Policy; Politics, Religion and Ideology; Polity; PS: Political

Science & Politics; Raisons Politiques; Res Publica.

Other journals (14) include Architecture Philosophy; Cogent Social Sciences; Crime

Psychology Review; Environment and Planning D: Space and Society; Ethics and

Social Welfare; Forum for Development Studies; International Health; International

Journal of Social Economics; International Studies Quarterly; Journal of Human

Development and Capabilities; London Review of Education; Neuroethics; Social

Psychology Quarterly; Youth Justice.

Manuscript referee for 17 academic and professional publishers:

Berghahn, Blackwell, Bloomsbury Academic, Broadview, Cambridge University

Press, Columbia University Press, Continuum, Edinburgh University Press, Hart.,

McGill-Queen’s University Press, Northwestern University Press, Oxford University

Press, Palgrave Macmillan, Policy Press, Polity, Rowman and Littlefield, Routledge,

and Springer.

FUNDING BODIES

Leadership

Academy of Finland, Philosophy Panel

o Chair, 2014

o Member, 2010, 2011

o Expert reviewer, 2016

Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) Peer Review College

o Member, 2010—11

Reviews Reviewed national funding proposals for:

Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC), since 2007.

Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC), since 2007.

Independent Social Research Foundation, since 2016.

Nuffield Foundation, since 2015.

Reviewed international funding proposals for:

European Research Council (ERC), EU.

German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD), Germany.

National Endowment for the Humanities (NEH) (Philosophy), USA.

National Science Foundation (NSF) (Philosophy), USA.

U.S. Fulbright Scholar Award (Philosophy), USA.

Fondation Maison des Sciences de l’Homme (Philosophy), France.

Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek – Vlaanderen (FWO) (Law), Belgium.

National Research Foundation (NRF), South Africa.

PRIZES JUDGED

W. J. M. Mackenzie Book Prize, Political Studies Association, 2006, 2014, 2015

(chair), 2016 (chair).

Sir Ernest Barker Prize for Best Dissertation in Political Theory, Political Studies

Association, 2011.

Bernard Crick Teaching Prize, Political Studies Association, 2007, 2008.

Berger Prize, American Philosophical Association, 2009, 2011.

Brit Writers Awards, 2010.

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OTHER SERVICE

Assessor, tenure and promotions committee

o Canada:

York University (Canada) (Philosophy)

o United Kingdom

Aberystwyth University (Law and Criminology)

University of Exeter (Law)

University of Essex (Law)

o United States

Carnegie Mellon University (Philosophy)

University of Richmond (Leadership Studies)

University of Utah (Philosophy)

Orator, Honorary Degree Award for Judge Wolfgang Schomburg, Durham

University, 2013.

Orator, Honorary Degree Award for [confidential until summer], Durham University,

2018.

Senior Common Room member at Durham University:

o Collingwood College, since 2013; Mentor, 2013—15.

o Grey College, since 2013.

o University College, since 2012; Mentor, since 2016.

EVENTS ORGANISED, a selection

‘Hegelian Philosophy—a Renaissance?’ conference (with Fabian Freyenhagen),

University of Sheffield, 2003.

Philosophy of crime and punishment conference, 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 Philip Pettit, 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.

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.

Conference on Martha Nussbaum’s The New Religious Intolerance, Durham

University, 2014.

Roundtable on political theory and impact (invited by Political Studies Association to

organise), Houses of Parliament, 2014.

Member, Scientific Committee, international symposium on cross border

displacement in local and international law, Faculty of Law, Inonu University,

Turkey, 2016.

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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, Dissertation, Evidence and Criminal Process, Jurisprudence, Legal

Frontiers, UK Constitutional Law.

SERVICE

2004—12 Newcastle University

Service to University: 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; Chair, Board of

Studies, 2008—10; 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.

2012— Durham University

Service to University: Member, Chair of Council Appointment Panel, 2017—18;

Chair, Durham DOES (Delivering Operational Excellence Strategy) Workplace

Challenge Project, 2017; Member, University Senate Agenda Setting Committee,

2017—; Member, University Senate, 2016—; Member, Effectiveness Review of

Boards of Studies, 2017—; Member, Appointment Panel (Pro-Vice-Chancellor

(Global)), 2017; Member, Faculty of Social Sciences and Health Board, 2016—;

Member, Hiring Committees (Government, Law, Social Policy), 2013—; Member,

Disciplinary Appeal Committee, 2016; Member, University Website Advisory Group,

2016—; Mentor, Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) Impact

Acceleration Account (IAA), 2015—; Member, Academic Electoral Assembly,

2012—.

Service to Law School: Dean of Durham Law School, 2016—; Access to Justice

Director, 2016—; Admissions Tutor, 2012—13; Annual Staff Reviewer, 2012—15,

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2016—; Chair, Board of Studies, 2016—; Chair, Recruitment Committee, 2017—;

Chair, Working Group on Research-Led Teaching, 2013; Member, Gender Equality

Charter Mark for Women in the Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences Committee,

2014—; Management Committee, 2013—15 (Member), 2016— (Chair); Deputy

Chair, Education Committee, 2013—15; Director of Undergraduate Studies, 2013—

15; Search Committees, 2013—; Member, Education Committee, 2013—15, 2016—

; Member, Research Committee, 2016—; Member, Staff Student Consultative

Committee, 2013—15.

Graduate Supervision, current and recent

Durham University research students - 8 completions

Matthew Hann on statelessness and human rights, PhD in Government, 2013.

Noha Aboueldahab on prosecutions and comparative law, PhD in Law, 2015.

Victoria Lang on the regulation of sex work, MJur in Law, 2015.

Catriona Ferguson on restorative justice, MJur in Law, 2015.

Graeme Brown on sexual offences and sentencing guidelines, MJur in Law, 2016.

Tom O’Neill on Hobbes and political obligation, Ph.D. in Government, 2016.

Mehmet Ozyurek on business ethics and corporate governance, Ph.D. in Law, 2016.

Adeniyi Olayode on Nigerian criminal justice and restorative justice, Ph.D. in Law,

2017.

In progress - 2

Reem Radhi on corporate crime and restorative justice, Ph.D. in Law.

Hannah Siddle on dignity and human development, Ph.D. in Government.

Non-Durham University research students – 2 completions

Hugo El Kholi (Sciences Po), the justificatory strategies of global justice norms,

Ph.D. in Politics, 2014.

Reena Kannojiya (Jawaharlal Nehru University), Shankara and Hegel, Ph.D. in

Philosophy in 2009. Co-supervisor during one-year visiting fellowship at Newcastle

University.

Graduate Student Examinations: external (15), internal (9)

External Assessor, D.Litt in Philosophy

University of Nottingham, 2014.

External Examiner, D.Phil. in Law

University of Oxford, 2013, 2016.

External Examiner, Ph.D.

Law

Northumbria University, 2016.

Philosophy

McMaster University, 2014.

University College Dublin, 2009.

University of Essex, 2009.

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University of Melbourne, 2010.

University of St Andrews, 2010.

Politics

University of Hull, 2014, 2015, 2018.

External Examiner, M.St. in Law

University of Oxford, 2009.

External Examiner, M.Phil. in Law

Aberystwyth University, 2013.

External Examiner, M.Phil.Stud. in Philosophy

Birkbeck, University of London, 2014.

Internal Examiner, Ph.D., Durham University

Law

Lizzie Tiarks on restorative justice, 2015.

Viviane Arnolds on international criminal law, 2016.

Yuan Yuan Hui on China and copyright law, 2016.

Eszter Belteki on American constitutionalism, 2018.

Philosophy

Alex Newbrook on the capabilities approach, 2017.

Theology and Religion

Andrew Brower-Latz on Gillian Rose’s social theory, 2015.

Internal Examiner, M.Jur. in Law, Durham University

Abu Mohammad Manzur Ahsan Reza on ECHR and immigration law, 2013.

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.

Degree Programmes

External Examiner, in Philosophy

BA (Hons) in Philosophy and Ethics, Bath Spa University, 2007—11.

External Examiner, in Law

LLB (Hons) in Criminal Law, Public Law; University of Salford, Manchester,

2016—.

LLB (Hons) in Criminal Law; Law of the EU; Law, Modernity and the Holocaust;

Law of Evidence; Criminology; Queen Mary, University of London, 2013—.

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RESEARCH FUNDING

Funding for research events (successful applications):

1. Newcastle University for conference on philosophy of crime and punishment, 2005

(lead applicant).

2. Association for Legal and Social Philosophy, Newcastle University and Society for

Applied Philosophy for conference on Martha Nussbaum’s Hiding from Humanity,

2006 (lead applicant).

3. Newcastle University for conference on work of Thomas Pogge, 2006 (lead

applicant).

4. Newcastle University for conference on work of Philip Pettit, 2009 (lead applicant).

5. Newcastle University for conference on Martha Nussbaum’s Liberty of Conscience,

Newcastle University, 2009 (lead applicant).

6. Jean Beer Blumenfeld Center for Ethics at Georgia State University and Newcastle

University for conference on Death: Its Meaning, Morality, and Metaphysics, 2011

(joint applicant with Andrew I. Cohen).

7. American Philosophical Association’s Committee on Philosophy and Law and

Harvard Law Review for workshop on capabilities and constitutions, 2008 (lead

applicant).

8. Newcastle University for Faculty of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences Research

Award-funded event on multiculturalism and social renewal, 2012 (lead applicant).

9. Durham University for Law School-funded event on legal and political philosophy,

2013 (lead applicant).

10. Durham University for conference on work of Martha C. Nussbaum, 2014 (lead

applicant).

11. Durham University’s Law School support for book launch event in Westminster,

2016 (lead applicant).

Funding for personal research (successful applications):

1. Overseas Research Scheme Award, 2001—2004.

2. University of Sheffield Bursary Award, 2001—2004.

3. European Union Grant for Young Researchers, 2003.

4. Newcastle University’s Arts and Humanities Research Fund (AHRF) Award

(‘Idealism and Punishment’), 2004.

5. 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.

6. Newcastle University’s School of Geography, Politics, and Sociology Research

Award (‘British Idealism and the Several Functions Theory of Punishment’), 2008.

7. Newcastle University’s School of Geography, Politics, and Sociology Research

Award (‘British Idealism and Legal Philosophy’), 2009.

8. Newcastle University’s School of Geography, Politics, and Sociology Research

Award (‘Between Statism and Cosmopolitanism: Rethinking Approaches to Global

Justice’), 2009—10.

9. Newcastle University Faculty of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences Research

Award, 2010—11.

10. Newcastle University’s School of Geography, Politics, and Sociology Research

Award (‘A Bridge between Traditions: New Perspectives on Philosophy and Its

Possibilities’), 2012—13.

11. Durham University’s Law School (‘Punishment Book Launch’), 2013.

12. Durham University’s Law School (‘Life in the UK Citizenship Test Report’), 2013.

13. Durham University’s Seedcorn Funding Award (‘Sentencing Matters’), 2013-14.

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14. Matariki Network Travel Grant, Durham University, funding travel to Uppsala

University, 2014.

15. Durham University’s Law School, Educational Purposes Fund, 2014.

16. Durham University’s Law School (‘Border Controls: A Pilot Study of Gender and

Barriers to UK Citizenship’), 2015.

17. Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) Impact Acceleration Account

funding (UK) (‘Reforming the Life in the UK Test’), 2015.

18. Durham University’s Seedcorn Funding Award (‘Labour Party’), 2015.

19. Durham University’s Research Impact Fund Award (‘British Citizenship Examined’),

2017.