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LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS

Caroline T. Arruda is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of Texas at El Paso. Her work focuses on issues at the intersection of philosophy of action and metaethics and has appeared in journals such as Australasian Journal of Philosophy, Analysis, Mind & Language, The Journal of the American Philosophical Association, among others.

She has been a Visiting Researcher at the Center for the Study of Mind in Nature at the University of Oslo and an Academic Visitor at the Australian National University. She is currently at work on a monograph entitled Enriching Practical Reason.

Gunnar Bjornsson is Professor of Practical Philosophy at Stockholm University. He works on issues in metaethics, moral responsibility, collective moral agency, and philosophy of language, with recent work appearing in, among other publications, Mind, Nous, Ethics, and Philosophy and Phenomenological Research.

Olle Blomberg is a researcher at the Department of Philosophy, Linguistics and Theory of Science at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden. He received his PhD from the University of Edinburgh in 2013. He has published mainly on topics within philosophy of action, collective intentionality, and the philosophy of cognitive science.

Liam Kofi Bright is Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Logic, and Scientific Method at the London School of Economics and Political Science. His current research focuses on social epis­temology, looking especially at how the institutional arrangement of science helps or hinders our ability to produce and disseminate knowledge.

Stephanie Collins is Senior Research Fellow at the Australian Catholic University. She has published widely on collective responsibility. Her second book, Group Duties: Their Existence and Their Implications for Individuals, was published in 2019. Her first book, The Core of Care Ethics, was published in 2015.

David Copp is Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, Emeritus, at the University of California, Davis. He is author of Morality, Normativity, and Society (1995) and Morality in a Natural World (2007), and he has edited several anthologies, including The Oxford Handbook of Ethical Theory (2006). He is editor of a monograph series with Oxford University Press called “Oxford Moral Theory.” He has published and lectured widely on topics in moral and political philosophy.

Michael D. Doan is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Eastern Michigan University. His research interests are in social epistemology, social and political philosophy, and moral psych­ology. He is the author of “Resisting Structural Epistemic Injustice,” Feminist Philosophical Quarterly (forthcoming), and “Epistemic Injustice and Epistemic Redlining,” Ethics and Social Welfare (2017).

Robin Downie is Emeritus Professor of Moral Philosophy at Glasgow University. Recent books include: The Philosophy of Palliative Care (2006, with Fiona Randall), Bioethics and the Humanities (2007, with Jane Macnaughton), and End of Life Choices (2009, with Fiona Randall).

Wim Dubbink is Professor of Philosophy at Tilburg University in the Netherlands. His research is focused on the development of a Kantian theory of the market, which involves both a moral theory of the duties of individual market actors and a political theory of the market within liberal democracies. He is the author of Assisting the Invisible Hand: Contested Relations Between Market, State and Civil Society (2003) and is currently editor of The Journal of Ethics.

Anton Eriksson is a PhD student at the Department of Philosophy at the University of Sheffield. His thesis work focuses on climate ethics and the issue of moral responsibility for GHG emissions in global supply chains.

Peter A. French is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at Arizona State University. He was the Lincoln Professor of Ethics and the Founding Director of the Lincoln Center for Applied Ethics and its Director at ASU.

He is the author of 21 books including Wir and Moral Dissonance (2012); The Virtues of Vengeance (2012); Ethics and College Sports (2004); Corporate Ethics (1998); Cowboy Metaphysics (1997); Responsibility Matters (1992); Collective and Corporate Responsibility (1987); Ethics in Government (1983); and The Scope of Morality (1980).

Shannon Fyfe is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at George Mason University, where she is also a Faculty Fellow at the Institute for Philosophy and Public Policy. She recently published International Criminal Tribunals: A Normative Defense (with Larry May) in 2017.

Margaret Gilbert is Melden Chair in Moral Philosophy and Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at the University of California, Irvine. Her many books include, most recently, Rights and Demands (2018) and Joint Commitment: How We Make the Social World (2014).

Michael O. Hardimon is Professor of Philosophy at the University of California San Diego. Before teaching there he taught at Harvard University and MIT. His writings include “Role Obligations” (Journal of Philosophy, 1994), Hegel's Social Philosophy: The Project of Reconciliation (1994), and Rethinking Race: The Casefor Deflationary Realism (2017).

Kendy M. Hess is Brake Smith Associate Professor of Social Philosophy and Ethics at the College ofthe Holy Cross. She has a JD from Harvard Law School and a PhD from the University of Colorado. Her research currently focuses on developing a metaphysically robust theory of group agency, which will justify ascribing moral obligations to corporations without granting them personhood. Her recent books include Collectivity: Ontology, Ethics, and SocialJustice (2018, edited with Tracy Isaacs and Violetta Igneski) and Nonviolence as a Way of Life: History, Theory, Practice (2017, edited with Predrag Cicovacki).

Frank Hindriks is Professor of Ethics, Social and Political Philosophy at the Faculty of Philosophy of the University of Groningen and director of the Centre of Philosophy, Politics and Economics (PPE).

He is one of the founding editors of the Journal of Social Ontology. He has published on topics within economic methodology, moral psychology, and social ontology.

Bryce Huebner is Provost’s Distinguished Associate Professor of Philosophy at Georgetown University. He is the author of Macrocognition: A theory of distributed minds and collective inten­tionality (2015), and the editor of The Philosophy of Daniel Dennett (2018). His current research focuses on the role of reinforcement learning in social cognition, the relationships between individual and group agency, and the nature of emotional states.

Violetta Igneski is Associate Professor of Philosophy at McMaster University in Canada. Her primary research interests include the nature and limits of our individual and collective duties of beneficence and also their connection to human rights. She has co-edited (with Tracy Isaacs and Kendy M. Hess) Collectivity: Ontology, Ethics, and Social Justice (2018).

Christopher Kutz is C. William Maxeiner Distinguished Professor of Law in the Jurisprudence & Social Policy Program at Berkeley Law School, UC Berkeley. He is the author of Complicity: Ethics and Lawfor a Collective Age (2001, reissued 2007) and, most recently, On War and Democracy (2016). He is currently working on the ethics of climate change.

Holly Lawford-Smith is Senior Lecturer in Political Philosophy at the University of Melbourne, and a Research Associate at the Australian National University. She works mainly within social philosophy, with a focus on collective agency and responsibility.

Kirk Ludwig is Professor of Philosophy and Cognitive Science at Indiana University, Bloomington. He works in the philosophy of language, philosophy of mind and action, epis­temology, and metaphysics. His most recent books are From Individual to Plural Agency: Collective Action 1 (2016), From Plural to Institutional Agency: Collective Action 2 (2017), and The Routledge Handbook of Collective Intentionality (2018, edited with Marija Jankovic).

Pekka Makela is the head of discipline in Practical Philosophy and the coordinator of the Centre for Philosophy of Social Science (TINT) in the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Helsinki.

He is an editor of Trust: Analytic and Applied Perspectives (2013).

Gregory Mellema is Professor of Philosophy at Calvin College. He has published in 30 different peer-reviewed journals, including American Philosophical Quarterly, Canadian Journal of Philosophy, Philosophical Studies, Australasian Journal of Philosophy, Journal of Ethics, Analysis, and Philosophia. His book, The Expectations of Morality, appeared in 2004.

Seumas Miller holds research appointments at Charles Sturt University, Delft University of Technology, and the University of Oxford. He is the author or coauthor of over 200 academic articles and 20 books, including Social Action (2001) and Moral Foundations of Social Institutions (2010).

Avia Pasternak is Associate Professor at the Department of Political Science, The School of Public Policy, University College London.

Bjorn Petersson is Associate Professor in Practical Philosophy, Lund University. His research focuses on collective intentions and actions (“Collectivity and Circularity”,Journal of Philosophy 2007), and the implications of such analyses for practical rationality (“Team Reasoning and Collective Intentionality” Review of Philosophy and Psychology 2017) and for responsibility (“Co-responsibility and Causal Involvement” Philosophia 2013).

Maura Priest is Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Bioethicist at Arizona State University. She has published over 20 articles in ethics, epistemology, and collective action. She is currently working on a book for Routledge about elites and elitism.

Linda Radzik is Professor of Philosophy at Texas A&M University. The author of Making Amends: Atonement in Morality, Law, and Politics (2009), her research addresses moral, legal, and political issues that emerge in the aftermath of wrongdoing. She has published on topics such as forgiveness, criminal punishment, and political reconciliation. Radziks most recent work explores bystanders’ responses to wrongdoing and the ethics of social punishment.

Juha Raikka is Professor of Philosophy and the Dean of the Faculty of Social Sciences at the University of Turku, Finland. He is the author of Social Justice in Practice (2014) and a co-editor of Adaptation and Autonomy (2013).

Abraham Sesshu Roth is Professor in the Philosophy Department at Ohio State University. He has taught at UCLA and at the University of Illinois at Chicago, and received his PhD from Princeton. He works mainly in the philosophy of action, focusing on issues concerning intentions, practical reasoning, reasons explanation, shared agency, and related issues in epistem­ology and moral psychology. He has published in The Philosophical Review, Nous, Ethics, Oxford Studies in Agency and Responsibility, Philosophy and Phenomenological Research, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy, and Philosophical Studies.

Carol Rovane is Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University. She is the author of The Bounds of Agency: An Essay in Revisionary Metaphysics (1998) and The Metaphysics and Ethics of Relativism (2013) and numerous articles on interrelated topics such as the first person, personal identity, relativism, the foundations of value, group vs. individual responsibility, and some new problems for liberal theory.

Hans Bernhard Schmid is Professor for Social and Political Philosophy at the University of Vienna. His areas of research include social and political philosophy, philosophy of the social sciences, social ontology, and phenomenology.

Anne Schwenkenbecher is Lecturer in Philosophy at Murdoch University in Western Australia. Her PhD in Philosophy is from Humboldt University of Berlin. Much of her current research revolves around the ideas of collective agency and morality of groups. Further interests include social epistemology, environmental philosophy, ethics of political violence, and activism. Her first book Terrorism: A Philosophical Enquiry was published in 2012. She is currently working on her second book titled Collective Moral Obligations. Her work has been published in journals such as Ratio, Midwest Studies in Philosophy, The Monist, and Environmental Values.

Amy J. Sepinwall is Associate Professor in the Department of Legal Studies and Business Ethics at Wharton, University of Pennsylvania, with training in law and philosophy. She writes on issues of shared responsibility, corporate personhood, and constitutional rights. Much of her work seeks to defend an account of liability to blame without fault, developed in art­icles addressing slavery reparations; citizen responsibility for national transgressions; complicity through material support; criminal liability for corporate executives; and parental responsibility for the crimes of their adolescent children.

Kenneth Shockley is Associate Professor at Colorado State University where he holds the Holmes Rolston III Chair in Environmental Ethics and Philosophy. His research interests are in the expression of environmental values in public policy, the ethical dimensions of climate policy, environmental justice, and collective responsibility. Currently, he is exploring the intersection of environmental ethics, climate ethics, and sustainable development. His work has appeared in such journals as Philosophical Studies, Environmental Ethics, Environmental Values, Ethics, Policy, and Environment, Journal of Social Philosophy, Philosophy of the Social Sciences, and Philosophy and Public Policy Quarterly.

Michael Skerker is Associate Professor in the Leadership, Ethics, and Law department at the US Naval Academy. His academic interests include professional ethics, just war theory, and moral pluralism. Publications include works on ethics and asymmetrical war, moral pluralism, intelligence ethics, and the book An Ethics of Interrogation (2010).

Jeffery Smith is Seattle University’s Frank Shrontz Chair in Professional Ethics and Professor of Management in the Albers School of Business and Economics where he teaches ethics in the management, finance, and accounting programs. Professor Smith’s research interests lie at the intersection of philosophy and business and have been published in journals such as Business Ethics Quarterly, Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, and the Journal of Business Ethics. He has held visiting appointments at Tilburg University in the Netherlands, the Janet Prindle Institute for Ethics and the Keck Graduate Institute.

Cassie Striblen is Associate Professor of Philosophy at West Chester University near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Her book, Group Responsibility: A Narrative Account (2014), attempts to explain shared responsibility for hate crime. Prior to academia, she taught public school and served as a US Peace Corps volunteer.

Andras Szigeti is Senior Lecturer in Practical Philosophy at Linkoping University (Sweden) and an Associate Director and Research Fellow of the Lund Gothenburg Responsibility Project in Lund (Sweden). He serves as associate editor of the journal Ethical Theory and Moral Practice. He specializes in action theory, emotion theory, and the ethics and metaphysics of individual and collective responsibility. He has published among others in Dialectica, Ethical Theory and Moral Practice, the Review of Philosophy and Psychology, and the Journal of Value Inquiry.

Raimo Tuomela is Professor Emeritus of Philosophy, University of Helsinki, Finland; also per­manent Visiting Professor of Philosophy, University of Munich. His recent books include The Philosophy of Sociality (2007) and Social Ontology (2013). His philosophical work was the subject of the book Social Ontology and Collective Intentionality: Critical Essays on the Philosophy of Raimo Tuomela with His Responses (2017, edited by Gerhard Preyer and Georg Peter).

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Source: Bazargan-Forward Saba, Tollefsen Deborah (eds.). The Routledge Handbook of Collective Responsibility. Routledge,2020. — 538 p.. 2020

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