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Call for Applications

PhD Student Position in the Study of Global Poverty
An ARC-funded Project
Australian National University
Canberra, ACT (Australia)

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Applications are invited for a PhD scholarship to be funded as part
of an ARC Discovery grant to begin in early/mid 2010. The scholarship
is valued at $26,669 per annum (tax free and indexed annually) and
may be renewed. The successful candidate will be based at the
Australian National University in Canberra.

The research undertaken will be part of a collaborative project to
investigate the duties of people in wealthy countries to address
global poverty. Two principles are commonly invoked in support of the
view that the affluent in the developed world have weighty moral
reasons (heretofore referred to as ‘responsibilities’) to address
global poverty. The first is based on the idea that because the poor
are in severe need and the affluent are in a position to alleviate
such need at moderate cost, they have responsibilities to do so – the
principle of assistance. The second is based on the idea that because
the poor are in severe need and the affluent have contributed or are
contributing to their need they have responsibilities to alleviate it
– the principle of contribution. The aim of this project is to
investigate the meaning, moral significance, and practical
implications of these two principles, and to address some of the
crucial and often underappreciated implications of the failures of
affluent agents to act on their responsibilities to address global
poverty.

More specifically, the aims of the project are:

- To examine in detail the meaning as well as the ethical and
practical significance of the two principles that have been most
commonly invoked as grounds for holding affluent persons and other
agents to have responsibilities to address global poverty.

- To investigate the common conviction that ethical reasons to help
protect people in need are more stringent for those who have
contributed to the need in question.

- To explore applications of the two principles in the real
world, where there is often quite substantial empirical uncertainty
about the contributions that different agents have made to poverty
and about the capacities of various agents to address it effectively.

- To provide a clear account of just what ‘contributing’ to global
poverty can plausibly be claimed to consist in.

- To examine the implications of these principles for some practical
dilemmas arising in the context of international trade and
environmental protection.

- To study the implications of non-compliance, in particular what
means (legal or illegal) poor people may permissibly use to alleviate
their need when such need is due to others’ failure to live up to
their responsibilities.

The work will be led by the philosophers Christian Barry, Gerhard
Øverland and Thomas Pogge. Applicants should have an appropriate
Honours 1 or 2A (or equivalent) undergraduate degree or an MA in one
of the main disciplines relevant to the project (philosophy,
economics, or political science), together with a strong interest in
the goals of the project.

Further information can be obtained from Christian Barry
<[email protected]> and Gerhard Øverland
<[email protected]>.

Please forward your CV and covering letter highlighting the area(s)
you would be most interested in working on, by 15th November 2009, to:

Mr Ian Sharpe
CAPPE Business Manager
LPO Box 8260
The Australian National University
Canberra, ACT 0200
Australia
Email: [email protected]
 
 
 
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