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Call for Publications

Theme: Global Taxation
Publication: Journal of Applied Philosophy
List-Post: [email protected]
Date: Special Issue
Deadline: 15.1.2013

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Concerns over climate change, global recessions, financial
volatility, health deficits in poor countries, world poverty, and
economic injustice have all resulted in global taxation policy
proposals.  These include proposals of carbon taxes, currency
transaction taxes, air-ticket taxes, and of reforms governing tax
havens and disclosure requirements.  Such initiatives are currently
enjoying serious analysis, attention and, in some cases,
implementation success.  While issues concerning national taxation
have long concerned philosophers - invoking core questions about the
legitimacy of governments and their appropriate functions and about
the nature of freedom, coercion, and property rights - the issue of
global taxation has not received anything like the same attention.
Through a special issue of this journal, we aim to remedy such
neglect.  

Some of the questions that the issue may address include:

1) What moral justifications can be offered for global taxation? 

2) Who should be taxed?  Should some individuals or countries be
exempt?  Should there be global taxes on businesses and multinational
corporations?

3) What should be taxed? What arguments favour taxing consumption,
wealth, income, speculation, trade, sales, natural resources, or a
host of other potential tax bases? 

4) It seems important to ensure that governance arrangements
concerning taxation (including matters of collection, disbursement of
revenue, and other decision-making) be accountable.  Is there a
special problem of accountability at the global level?

5) What entity(ies) should implement or enforce global taxation
policies?  If these are to be transnational entities, what would be
the source of legitimate authority for them to do so?  Would this
authority conflict with state sovereignty?

6) How (if at all) do implementation or feasibility issues affect the
desirability of various tax proposals?

7) Do arguments about global taxation shed light on some of the core
concerns in political philosophy, such as the nature of property
rights, freedom, coercion, interpersonal obligations, the legitimacy
of authority, or appropriate governance of collective affairs?

We especially welcome papers that move discussion of global taxation
topics in new directions.

The guest co-editors of the proposed volume will be Gillian Brock
(Auckland), Tom Campbell (CAPPE, Australia), and Thomas Pogge (Yale).

The Journal now invites submissions of papers for this special issue.
Submissions should be sent as an email attachment to <[email protected]>
in a form suitable for blind review. The maximum length of
submissions to the Journal is 8000 words. Please mark the email
subject heading: 'For Global Taxation Special issue'. The deadline
for submissions for this special issue is 15 January 2013.

Any queries about the proposed special issue can be directed to
Gillian Brock: [email protected]
 
 
 
 
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