Colloquium in Legal and Political Philosophy: Michael Wilkinson (LSE)

Date

Monday September 18, 2023
3:30 pm - 5:30 pm

Location

Law Building (128 Union), Room 400

Members of the 黑料吃瓜资源 community are invited to join, in person, the first workshop of the 2023 , which will welcome Michael Wilkinson (LSE).

Note that the Colloquium in Legal and Political Philosophy is a 鈥減re-read鈥 event: guests鈥 papers are circulated beforehand, and participants who wish to ask questions and contribute to the discussion are expected to have read them. The papers, once available, can be found on . The convenors will share the password to access the papers via email.

da Silva, Joel

Photograph of Joel da Silva

Joel da Silva

Ph.D. Candidate

Philosophy

Research Interests:

Political philosophy, nonideal theory, contractualism, affirmative action, rectificatory justice.

Biography:

  • BA, Honours (Philosophy) Wilfrid Laurier University
  • MA (Philosophy) Toronto Metropolitan University

Joel's research begins from the observation that, while political philosophers working in ideal theory have devoted much attention both to the question 鈥渨hat are the correct principles of ideal justice?鈥 and to the question 鈥渨hich particular arrangements/policies satisfy the principles of ideal justice?鈥, work in nonideal theory has focused almost exclusively on the analogue to the second question - i.e., 鈥渨hich particular arrangements/policies count as just responses to injustice?鈥 It's been roughly a quarter century since the beginning of the "nonideal turn鈥 in political philosophy, yet philosophers have produced remarkably little in the way of systematic answers to the question 鈥渨hat are the correct principles of justice in responding to injustice?"

Ultimately, Joel鈥檚 research seeks to highlight the significance of this lacuna in hopes of encouraging others to take up the work of addressing it. His strategy for doing this consists of demonstrating i) why theories of justice in responding to injustice (i.e., theories of "nonideal justice") are needed to bridge the gap between ideal theories of justice and questions of nonideal policy (e.g., whether race-based affirmative action counts as a just response to injustice) and ii) how one might go about constructing a contractualist theory of nonideal justice.

Wong, Jazz

Photograph of Jazz Wong seated outside

Jazz Wong

MA

Philosophy

Research Interests:

Political Philosophy, Philosophy of Law, Moral Philosophy, Feminist Philosophy, Critical Race Theory

Biography:

  • B.A. Honours (Specialist in Philosophy), University of Toronto

 

Grimaldi, Justyn

Black and white photograph of Justyn Grimaldi

Justyn Grimaldi

Ph.D. Student

Philosophy

Research Interests:

Metaphysics of Time and Logic 

Biography:

  • BA (Philosophy) Trent University
  • MA (Philosophy) Queen's University

Justyn specialized in ethics as an undergraduate student and focused in on the metaphysics of time and logic during his Master's studies. He plans to continue his research into the metaphysics of time, especially the C-Series of time and how it relates to causation. He is particularly interested in temporal and dynamic logic and how such logics would work under different theories of time, including the C-Series.

Joseph, Dean

Photograph of Dean Joseph

Dean Joseph

Ph.D. Candidate

Philosophy

Research Interests

Social and Political Philosophy, Democratic Theory, Animal and Disability Ethics, Social Epistemology

Biography
  • B.A., Honours (Philosophy), Saint Mary鈥檚 University
  • M.A. (Philosophy), Concordia University

I鈥檓 interested in why democracy matters. Many of us think it matters, but its value is increasingly disputed in political theory. My dissertation explores the idea that democracy enables us to co-author a shared society and asks how democratic values extend to animals, children, and persons with profound cognitive disabilities.

In a second research track, I ask how trust shapes our political life. I focus on how trust deepens political disagreements and when distrust is warranted. I approach these questions through cases involving marginalized minorities as well as conspiracy theories and echo chambers.

I am a . In 2023, I was a research fellow at Concordia University鈥檚 and Montreal鈥檚 interuniversity . In Fall 2026, I will be a visiting doctoral researcher in philosophy at the .

Publications
  • 鈥溾 (2025) Social Epistemology: 1鈥14 (online first)

McMullin, Jessica

Photograph of Jessica McMullin outside in Fall.

Jessica McMullin

Ph.D. Candidate

Philosophy

Research Interests

Environmental Philosophy, Moral and Political Philosophy, Phenomenology

Biography
  • B.A. Hons. (Specialist in Philosophy), University of Toronto
  • M.A. (Philosophy: Political and Legal Thought), Queen's University

Jessica's PhD research seeks to understand how human language might facilitate or inhibit our moral receptivity to non-human others and the environment, bringing together Wittgenstein's later thought with Merleau-Ponty's phenomenology. Her past graduate work interrogated the metaphysics and politics of moral agency in corporate bodies. She continues to write on political philosophy as it concerns environmental ethics.

Bergeron, Abigail

Abigail Bergeron

Abigail Bergeron

Ph.D. Candidate

Research Interests:

  • Philosophy of Society and Culture, Philosophy of Technology, Continental Philosophy, Agrarian Philosophy, Philosophy of Law

Education:

  • Bachelor of Arts (Philosophy), Trent University
  • Bachelor of Laws (Law), Swansea University
  • Master of Arts (Philosophy: Political and Legal Thought), 黑料吃瓜资源
  • Master of Laws (Law), 黑料吃瓜资源

Abigail鈥檚 dissertation focuses on the life and legacy of the American philosopher of technology Albert Borgmann (1937-2023). She is Canada Doctoral Scholar (CGRS-D) and her project is funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC).   

Abigail鈥檚 primarily works in the philosophy of technology, following her first Master鈥檚 thesis (MA) which considered the question of driverless cars in relation to concerns about freedom and privacy. While she is interested in techno-skepticism generally, including the works of Martin Heidegger and Jacques Ellul, she finds Borgmann's framework most helpful for understanding the metaphysical and ethical implications of a life patterned by technology. For this reason, her wider work seeks to call into question the meliorist assumption that our lives are improving with technological progress.

Abigail鈥檚 other research interests include the philosophy of law, particularly constitutional rights jurisprudence and freedom of speech. Her second Master鈥檚 thesis (LLM) focused on the role of speech in online environments and how this tracks the moral and legal regulation of online environments. 

Abigail has been published in The Ellul Forum (2026), The Journal of Camus Studies (2023), How Does the Digitization of Our World Change Our Orientation? (Orientations Press: 2023), and The Christian Scholar鈥檚 Review (2025), and she has forthcoming articles in the Lakehead Law Journal and in the edited anthology Food, Technology and Society (Routledge: 2027). In addition, she has an active interest in improving student experience at 黑料吃瓜资源 through her work as a Graduate Student Advisor with the Society of Graduate & Professional Students (SGPS), and her participation on several SGPS Committees, including the Principal鈥檚 Advisor Committee, the Finance Committee, the Awards Committee and the Graduate Student Research & Academic Subcommittee. In Winter 2026, she also worked as a Curriculum Design Intern in the Faculty of Arts and Science through the 黑料吃瓜资源 Doctoral Internship in University Administration (QDIUA) program. 

In her spare time Abigail enjoys cooking, running, growing pumpkins and caring for her six cats.

Winslow, James

James Winslow

James Winslow

Ph.D. Student

Philosophy

Biography

B.A. Honours (Philosophy), Wilfrid Laurier University

M.A. (Philosophy: Political and Legal Thought), 黑料吃瓜资源

 

Research Interests

Normative Ethics, Metaethics

My primary interest is in the role that aggregative considerations should (or should not) play in our moral reasoning. I'm also interested in a range of questions about the ethics of ordinary relational life, especially how sharing close relationships with others can ground special expectations and obligations.

Workshop: "Desert, Merit, and Responsibility"

Date

Monday October 16, 2023
9:00 am - 1:00 pm

Location

Queen's University

黑料吃瓜资源's departments of Political Studies and Philosophy are delighted to invite you to participate in a hybrid, pre-read workshop 鈥楧esert, Merit, and Responsibility鈥, on October 16, 2023.

Schedule

09:00 - 09:45 Huub Brouwer and Dick Timmer - "If You are a Desertist, Why don鈥檛 you Defend Limits?"

09:45 - 10:30 Anca Gheaus - "Fair Equality of Opportunity in Unjust Circumstances"

10:30 - 11:15 Andrew Lister - "Egalitarianism Without the Moral Arbitrariness Thesis"

11:15 - 11:30 Break

11:30 - 12:15 Tammy Harel Ben Shahar and Nethanel Lipshitz - 鈥淛ustice for Grasshoppers: Reassessing Effort"

12:15 - 13:00 Richard Arneson - "Some Puzzles about Desert"

Each speaker will have a 45-minute time slot including a 5-minute introduction by the speaker and a 10-minute response by a commentator, followed by 30 minutes of general discussion. Participants are expected to have read the papers before participating in the workshop. 

To sign-up and receive the draft papers that will be presented at the workshop, . It is possible to participate either in-person or online. The registration deadline for in-person attendance is October 6. There are only a limited number of seats available for in-person participation. The registration deadline for virtual attendance is October 12.