Andrea Sangiovanni
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Contributors

Contributors

Rainer Forst is Professor of Political Theory and Philosophy and Director of the Research Center ‘Normative Orders’ at Goethe University Frankfurt. In 2012 he was awarded the Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz Prize of the German Research Foundation. Important publications are: Contexts of Justice (1994, published in English 2002), Toleration in Conflict (2003, Engl. 2013), The Right to Justification (2007, Engl. 2012), Normativity and Power (2015, Engl. 2017), Die noumenale Republik (2021, Engl. forthcoming). He is the author and subject of two volumes in the Critical Powers Series: Justice, Democracy and the Right to Justification (2014) and Toleration, Power and the Right to Justification (2020).

Jared Holley is Lecturer in Political Theory at the University of Edinburgh, having previously held a Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellowship for the project ‘Anticolonial Solidarity: analytical clarification through historical reconstruction’. He is the author of Rousseau’s Politics of Taste (forthcoming, Edinburgh University Press) and several articles, the most recent of which is ‘Racial Equality and Anticolonial Solidarity: Anténor Firmin’s Global Haitian Liberalism’, American Political Science Review (2023).

Avery Kolers is Professor and Chair of Philosophy at the University of Louisville. He is the author of Land, Conflict, and Justice: A Political Theory of Territory (2009) and A Moral Theory of Solidarity (2016), as well as numerous papers in applied ethics and social and political philosophy. He is working on a book about what political theory can learn from the individual and collective goods we realize in athletic activity and games. A recent paper in this vein is ‘Groundwork for the Mechanics of Morals’, Canadian Journal of Philosophy (2021).

Catherine Lu is Professor of Political Science at McGill University in Montreal, Canada. Her research interests intersect political theory and international relations, focusing on critical and normative theoretical studies of colonial international order, structural injustice, and global justice; alienation and reconciliation; and cosmopolitanism and the world state. In addition to writing articles on these themes, she is the author of Justice and Reconciliation in World Politics (Cambridge University Press, 2017) and Just and Unjust Interventions in World Politics: Public and Private (Palgrave Macmillan, 2006).

Sally J. Scholz is Professor of Philosophy at Villanova University. An award-winning teacher and researcher, Scholz works in social philosophy on solidarity, oppression, violence, and just war theory. Publications include the books Political Solidarity, On de Beauvoir, and On Rousseau, and Feminism: A Beginner’s Guide. Scholz has co-edited numerous books and special issues, and served as editor for Hypatia, Journal of Peace and Justice Studies and the APA Newsletter on Philosophy and Feminism. In addition, Scholz is a leader in the profession, serving on the board of the American Philosophical Association and president of the North American Society for Social Philosophy.

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Solidarity – Nature, grounds, and value

Andrea Sangiovanni in dialogue

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