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What we stand for....
Imprints aims to promote a critical discussion of egalitarian and socialist ideas, freed from theoretical dogma but committed to the viability of an egalitarian and democratic politics, and open to the possibility of such politics at the international level. We take it for granted that most societies in the world are characterised by class oppression, but that class division does not exhaust the unjust inequalities to which their peoples are subject.
Contributions are invited on topics such as the theory and practice of equality in domestic and global contexts, the theory of history, the normative foundations of social inquiry; and on social inequality, political practice, and institutional change. The criteria for the acceptance of papers include analytical power and empirical rigour; no school of thought or intellectual tradition is excluded, though we are committed to the view that the world remains a rationally intelligible place.
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Correspondence/Editorial: Professor Steve Smith, c/o School of Health and Social Sciences
and The Newport Social Ethics Research Group
University of Wales College, Newport, Allt-yr-yn Campus
Newport NP20 5XR United Kingdom or email
imprintseditor@gmail.com
Administrative/subscriptions: 58 Wilmer Drive, Bradford, BD9 4AS,
England
Links to other sites:
Arts and Letters Daily
Crooked Timber
Dissent
Boston Review
Human Rights Watch
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We have started to make some of our back-issue
content available on-line. See the list of
contents below for details. Keep revisiting this site as more becomes
available.
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Contents of vol. 9, no. 2
- An interview with Frances Kamm
- Nicole Vincent: Equality, Responsibility and Talent Slavery
- Anca Gheaus reviews Otsuka's Liberarianism Without Inequality
- Patti Tamara Lenard reviews Walzer's Politics and Passion
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Contents of vol. 9, no. 1
- An interview with Elizabeth Anderson
- John Baker: Equality: Who, What and Where?
- Jenny Keeble: What do Multinational Corporations Owe the World's Poor?
- Alex Callinicos reviews Jared Diamond's Collapse
- Stephen R. Smith reviews Baker et al Equality: From Theory to Action
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Contents of vol. 8, no. 3
- An interview with Joseph Raz
- Philip Bielby: Equality and Vulnerability in Biomedical Research on Human Subjects
- Kevin Hickson: Revisionism Revisited
- Kieran Healey reviews Klinenbergs Heatwave
- Harry Brighouse review Alstotts No Exit: What Parents Owe Their Children and What Society Owes Parents
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Contents of vol. 8, no. 2
- An Interview with T.M. Scanlon
- John Quiggin: The Equity Premium and the Socialist Case for Public Ownership
- Tony Burns: Whose Aristotle? Which Marx? Ethics, Law and Justice in Aristotle and Marx
- T.M. Wilkinson reviews Whites The Civic Minimum
- Bill Jordan reviews Ehrenreichs Nickel and Dimed and Abrams Below the Breadline
- Alan Carling reviews Wrights Class Counts
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Contents of vol. 8, no. 1
- An Interview with Martha Nussbaum
- Richard W. Bruner: It was the Best of Times, It was the Worst of Times
- Albena Azmanova: Curbing the Deficit: Democracy After the European Constitution (Constitutional Solutions to EUs Democratic Deficit)
- Paul Warren: Locating the Injustice of Exploitation: Some Thoughts on G.A. Cohens Exploitation in Marx
- John Christman reviews Brighouses School Choice and Social Justice
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Contents of vol. 7, no. 3 SPECIAL ISSUE:
- What We Do For Others: Situating Duty and Justice
- Jonathan Seglow and Gideon Calder (co-editors): Introduction: What We Owe to Others
- An Interview with David Miller
- Avner de-Shalit: Thou Shalt Love Thy Neighbour As Thyself: Friendship and Critical Moral Deliberation
- Niall Scott: Is Altruism a Moral Duty?
- Maureen Ramsay: Equality and Responsibility
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Contents of vol. 7, no. 2 (2003)
- An interview with Susan Mendus
- Chandra Kumar: Progress, Freedom, Human Nature, and Critical Theory
- Colin Macleod: Agency, Goodness and Endorsement
- Axel Gosseries reviews Christopher Kutz's 'Complicity'
- C.L. Ten reviews Brian Barry's 'Culture and Equality'
- Janna Thomson reviews Darrel Moellendorf's 'Cosmopolitan Justice'
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Contents of vol. 7, no. 1 (2003)
- An interview with Michael Walzer
- Daniel Attas: Fair Competition and Redistribution
- Chris Armstrong: Some Reflections on Equality of Power
- Norman Geras reviews Polanski's The Pianist
- Brian Alleyne reviews Dhondy on C.L.R. James
- Grace Roosevelt reviews Rothschild on the Enlightenment
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Contents of vol. 6, no. 3 (2002-3)
- An interview with Norman Geras
- Philip Ross: Marxism and Communitarianism
- David Bates: Ideology and the Intellectuals
- Seth Crook reviews books by Lomborg and Plumwood on the
environment
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Contents of vol. 6, no. 2 (2002)
- An interview with Brian Barry
- ONLINE! Symposium on the war in Afghanistan featuring:
- Darrel Moellendorf: Is the War in Afghanistan Just?
- Christopher Bertram: Afghanistan: A Just Intervention
- Saladin Meckled-Garcia: International Justice, Human Rights and Security After
11th September
- Stephen De Wijze on the limits of the reasonable
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Contents of vol. 6, no.1 (2002)
- An interview with Alex Callinicos
- Matt Matravers: Luck, Responsibility and 'The Jumble of Lotteries that
Constitutes Human Life'
- Stephanie Luce: A Primer on the US Living Wage Movement
- Jeremy Moss reviews Martha Nussbaum's Sex and Justice
- Bill Jordan reviews Alex Callinicos's Equality
- Adam Swift reviews Jon Mandle's What's Left of Liberalism
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Contents of vol. 5, no.3 (2001)
- An interview with Thomas Pogge
- Marc Stears and Stuart White: New Liberalism Revisited
- Harry Brighouse: Dworkin on Equality of Power
- Catriona McKinnon reviews Onora O'Neill's Bounds of Justice
- Alan Carling reviews Peter Singer's A Darwinian Left?
- T.M. Wilkinson reviews G.A. Cohen's If You're an Egalitarian, How Come
You're So Rich?
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Contents of vol. 5, no.2 (Winter 2000-2001)
- An interview with Bob Goodin
- Paul Wetherly: Living in a Post-Egalitarian Society
- Stephen Wilkinson: Intellectual Property Rights and the Human Body
- John Bellamy Foster reviews Jonathan Hughes on Marx and Ecology
- Jonathan Hughes review John Bellamy Foster on Marx and Ecology
- John Russell review Figes and Kolonitskii on the Russian Revolution
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Contents of vol. 5, no.1 (Summer 2000)
- An interview with Frank Vandenbroucke
- Norman Geras: "Life was Beautiful Even There"
- Graeme Kirkpatrick: " Towards a Critical Sociology of the Computer
Interface"
- Matthew Clayton: "The Resources of Liberal Equality"
- Elliott Sober reviews Christopher Boehm's Hierarchy in the
Forest
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Contents of vol. 4, no.3 (Spring 2000)
- An interview with Nancy Fraser
- Stuart White: "Recovering Republican Political Economy"
- Tom Mayer: "A New American Left"
- Ed Reiss reviews Wheen on Marx
- Zdenek Konopasek reviews Scott on the State
- Nick Manning reviews recent books on Russian capitalism
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Contents of vol. 4, no.2 (Winter 1999-2000)
- An interview with Joshua Cohen
- Ronald Paul on Jack Common and George Orwell
- Kurt Jacobsen and Alba Alexander on Emancipating Nature?
- Matt Matravers reviews T.M. Scanlon
- Hallvard Lillehammer reviews Jean Hampton
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Contents of vol. 4, no.1 (Summer 1999)
- An interview with Ruth Lister
- Franck Duvell and Bill Jordan on Immigration, Asylum and Citizenship
- Gordon Hughes and Adrian Little on New Labour's Communitarianism
- Andrew B. Trigg reviews Laibman on Capitalist Macrodynamics
- Ben Crum reviews Little on Post-Industrial Socialism
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Contents of vol. 3, no.3 (Spring 1999)
- An interview with Elliott Sober
- Alan Carling on Labour's "Third Way"
- Paul Wetherly on Socialism in our Times
- James Ladyman on the Sokal Affair
- Robert E. Goodin on Welfare and Responsibility
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Contents of vol. 3, no.2 (Winter 1998-99)
- An interview with George Monbiot
- Bill Jordan on New Labour
- T.M. Wilkinson, Raz on Equality
- Jocelyne Couture, Liberals and Cosmopolitans
- David Archard reviews Geras on the Holocaust
- Jason Edwards reviews Steger on Bernstein
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Contents of vol. 3, no.1 (June 1998)
- An interview with John Roemer
- Christopher Woodard, 'Egalitarianism, Responsibility and Desert'
- Nigel Pleasants, on Habermas's Critical Social Theory
- Tom Mayer reviews Marcus Roberts on analytical Marxism
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Contents of vol. 2, no. 3 (March 1998)
- An interview with Michael Rosen
- Kai Nielsen, 'Socialism and Nationalism'
- Vittorio Bufacchi, 'Reasonable Agreement'
- Alex Coram, 'Socialist Distribution'
- Keith Graham reviews Pettit on Republicanism
- Judith Squires reviews Lister on Citizenship
- Iain Gault reviews Diamond on History
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Contents of vol. 2, no. 2 (October 1997)
- An interview with Erik Olin Wright
- Steven R. Smith and Mike O'Neill, '"Equality of What?" and the Disability Rights Movement'
- Alex Coram, 'Social Choice Theory and Welfare'
- Alan Carling reviews Skyrms on Evolution and Contractarianism
- Libby Miller reviews Folbre on Paying for Childcare
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Contents of vol. 2, no. 1 (June 1997)
- An interview with Thomas McCarthy
- Alex Callinicos, 'History, Exploitation and Oppression'
- John Baker, 'Studying Equality'
- Christopher Bertram, 'Theories of Public Reason'
- Paul Dixon, 'Public Opinion and the Northern Ireland Peace Process'
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Contents of vol. 1, no. 3 (March 1996)
- An interview with Philippe Van Parijs
- G.A. Cohen, Commitment Without Reverence
- Adrian Little, 'Flexible Working'
- Philip Gerrans, 'Locating Nationalism'
- Elizabeth Frazer review Searle on Social Construction
- Ruth Lister reviews Jordan on Poverty
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Contents of vol. 1, no. 2 (October 1996)
- An interview with Jean Hampton
- Ed Reiss, 'Nothing Human Should Be Alien to Marx'
- Andrew Glyn, 'Taxing and Spending'
- Jennifer Hornsby, 'Free and Equal Speech'
- David Morgan reviews Diemut Bubeck, Care Gender and Justice
- Read 'Editor's Notes from the second issue!
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Contents of vol. 1, no. 1 (June 1996)
- An interview with G. A. Cohen
- Alan Carling: 'The Strange Career of John Gray'
- Graeme Kirkpatrick, 'Northern Ireland since the Peace'
- Ellen Meiksins Wood, 'Intellectualism and Human Emancipation'
- Ian Gough reviews Philippe Van Parijs, Real Freedom for All
- Read 'Editor's Notes' from the first issue!
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FORTHCOMING IN FUTURE ISSUES:
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