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Call for Publications

Theme: The Ethics of Boycotting
Publication: Journal of Applied Philosophy
Date: Special Issue
Deadline: 25.8.2015

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We are inviting abstracts for a collection that will be submitted as
a special issue of the Journal of Applied Philosophy, on the ethical
issues surrounding the practice of boycotting. Recent years have seen
an increase in boycotting as a tool of social activism. Examples
include the BDS’s campaign against the state of Israel, the calls
from LGBT and human rights organisations against the 2014 Sochi Games
and the 2022 Qatar World Cup, and the campaign against Amazon
launched by ethical consumerism groups. Among academics in general,
and philosophers in particular, there is also a growing interest in
the theory and praxis of boycotting (e.g. economic, academic,
political, cultural). However, despite considerable informal
discussion in various professional fora and on social media, the
topic of boycotting has thus far attracted surprisingly little
systematic scholarly attention from moral, political or legal
philosophers. This is a significant gap in academic philosophy, as
boycotting as a form of moral and political action raises a range of
important ethical questions, including:

- In what circumstances is boycotting appropriate?

- What light do the principal ethical theories (deontology,
  consequentialism, virtue theory) cast on the practice of boycotting?
  How do they view its justification and its limits?

- How are the appropriate targets of boycotting and the notion of
  complicity defined?

- What is the relevance of empirical evidence as to the efficacy of
  boycotting to its justification?

- How is the problem of collateral damage (i.e. harm done to parties
  not directly complicit in the actions warranting boycotts) to be
  weighed in the overall moral assessment of boycotts?

- Do academic boycotts raise issues distinct from other forms, such
  as economic and political ones?

This list is suggestive rather than exhaustive, and the editors
welcome papers that explore any pertinent issues relating to the
ethics of boycotting in a focused and systematic manner, and by using
the tools and intellectual traditions of moral, political and legal
philosophy. The special issue has drawn preliminary interest from the
Journal of Applied Philosophy, to which a full proposal including
selected abstracts will be submitted.

Abstracts (500-600 words) should be sent to the editors: Daniel
Weinstock ([email protected]) and Yael Peled
([email protected]). The deadline for submissions is August 15
2015.


Contact:

Dr. Yael Peled          
Institute for Health and Social Policy
McGill University
Charles Meredith House 
1130 Pine Avenue West
Montreal, QC H3A 1A3
Canada
Tel.: +1 514 398-1236 
Email: [email protected]




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