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Call for Publications

Theme: Collective Agents and Global Structural Injustice
Publication: Journal of Applied Philosophy
Date: Special Issue
Deadline: 1.12.2018

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Problems of practical global justice frequently involve cases of
structural injustice. More than mere ‘bad luck’, cases of general
structural injustice take place when an individual experiences harm
or disadvantage, which is broadly:

(i) Due in some way to features of her social position or identity;

(ii) something which in some way, she ought not to have suffered; and

(iii) not obviously, or necessarily, traceable only to the malicious
intent and / or actions of an individual agent(s).

For this special issue of the Journal of Applied Philosophy, we focus
on this third condition. The production of structural injustices in
the absence of clear individual causal or moral responsibility
suggests a role for collective agents. Our goal for this special
issue is to find papers that consider theoretical questions of
collective agency, under the non-ideal conditions of global
structural injustices.

Broadly speaking, collective agency occurs when people act together
in a minimally coordinated manner to produce a particular outcome or
achieve a goal. Collective agents may be formally structured, or not.
They may supervene on the base of their individual members or be
emergent in some other capacity. A large body of primarily
theoretical literature on collective agency exists. Theorists are
focused on finding the conditions for the existence of collective
agents, capacities of collective agents, and the extent to which
these collective agents might be held legally and morally
responsible. Our aim however is to encourage contributors to actively
bring this theoretical work on collective agency to bear on matters
of substantive global structural injustice, following in the
footsteps of those who have begun to investigate the crossovers.

Global structural injustices paradigmatically range from the
conditions produced by increasing wealth inequality, through the
negative effects of climate change on globally vulnerable
populations, to the current Syrian refugee crisis. In each of these
cases, collective agents arguably play a role in producing and
sustaining structural injustice. The role of collective agents in
structural injustice is well-demonstrated in Iris Marion Young’s
analysis of the case of global sweatshop labour; arguably, an
individualist account of structural injustices fails to incorporate
many other apparently (or even uniquely) responsible collective
agents. However, it might also be the case that the aggregative harms
of multiple individual moral agents in itself brings about – either
normatively or descriptively – a form of causal and/or morally
responsible collective agency, even where no identifiable
formally-structured collective agent exists. We encourage
contributors to consider these, and any and all other cases.

Suggested topics include, but are not limited to:

Responsibility:

- What is the role of collective agents in producing and rectifying
  specific cases of global structural injustice?
- Is there a moral and/or practical discontinuity in the way in which
  collective agents, distinct from individual actors, are responsible
  for specific global structural injustices? Is this different from
  the way in which individual actors are responsible for
  non-structural injustices?
- Is collective agent responsibility backwards looking, forward
  looking, or both? How does this manifest in cases of global
  structural injustices?

Creation and Existence:

- What is the relationship between cases of global structural
  injustice and the emergence/creation/ existence of collective
  agency? Where can this be seen in specific instances?
- Do individuals have a normative duty to form collective agents in
  order to address particular instances of global structural
  injustice? Which individuals? In what positions, under what
  circumstances?
- What impact do cases of global structural injustice have on the
  capacity of individuals to form collective agents to address these
  problems? Does global structural enable or suppress the formation of
  particular sorts of collective agents? How does that impact
  questions of responsibility?

The deadline for submissions is December 1st 2018. Articles should be
no more than 8000 words including endnotes.

See Author Guidelines for further details regarding style:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/page/journal/14685930/homepage/forauthors.html

Papers should be submitted through Scholar One Journal of Applied
Philosophy: https://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/japp
Please check the box during submission that indicates your paper is
for a special issue.

If you have any questions, please contact the guest editors Christina
Friedlaender ([email protected]) and Leonie Smith
([email protected]).

Journal website:
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/14685930




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