__________________________________________________

Call for Publications

Theme: Arthur Applbaum's Legitimacy
Subtitle: The Right to Rule in a Wanton World and Legitimacy beyond
the State
Publication: Moral Philosophy and Politics (MOPP)
Date: Special Issue
Deadline: 1.9.2022

__________________________________________________


Philosophical debates about political legitimacy have significantly
expanded over the last decade. One important contribution is Arthur
Applbaum’s recent book Legitimacy: The Right to Rule in a Wanton
World. On his account, power can only be exercised permissibly when
we are governed by a free group agent. In developing this view,
Applbaum also touches on many other important philosophical issues,
like the concept of legitimacy, the conditions for legitimate foreign
intervention, and the role of constitutional constraints and
democratic processes in justifying power. The book also provides a
novel critique of “wanton” government, which Applbaum diagnoses as a
government which fails to constitute a coherent agent who is
responsive to the reasons which apply to them.

Moral Philosophy and Politics invites contributions that engage with
ideas and arguments from Applbaum’s book. Beyond his book, we are
also interested in attempts to expand theorising about legitimacy
beyond the state to global issues and institutions. We are especially
interested in accounts of the legitimacy of international
institutions, like the UN, WTO or ICJ, and how the right to rule
should be assigned in a world which faces global existential
challenges like climate change. Contributions which tackle these
wider issues are encouraged, but not required, to engage with
Applbaum’s work.

There is a wide range of themes in Applbaum’s book. Some of the
contributions that papers could focus on are the following:

- Applbaum’s power-liability account of the concept of legitimacy
- The group agency account of legitimacy
- Freedom and the foundations of a theory of legitimacy
- Kantian and Republican accounts of legitimacy (in Applbaum and
  others)
- Legitimate foreign intervention
- The role of democratic procedures and substantive outcomes in
  justifying power
- “Wanton” government and other failures of agency
- Applications of Applbaum’s arguments to contemporary issues

For the topic of legitimacy beyond the state we invite contributions
that tackle the following issues:

- Conceptually understanding legitimacy beyond the state
- Group agency and legitimacy beyond the state
- The legitimacy of international organisations, especially
  international courts
- The political legitimacy of responses to climate change
- Existential threats to humanity and political legitimacy

The deadline has been extended to September 1, 2022.
Submissions should be between 3.000 and 10.000 words in length.

All submissions will undergo MOPP’s double-blind refereeing process.
Please note that this process is not organized by the guest editors
but by the journal’s founding editors who will also have the final
word on publication decisions.

Guest Editors:
Matthias Brinkmann (PluriCourts, University of Oslo)
Anthony Taylor (Nuffield College, University of Oxford)

The journal’s manuscript submission site can be accessed at:
http://mc.manuscriptcentral.com/mopp


Journal website:
https://www.mopp-journal.org






__________________________________________________


InterPhil List Administration:
https://interphil.polylog.org

InterPhil List Archive:
https://www.mail-archive.com/interphil@list.polylog.org/

__________________________________________________

Reply via email to