Assistant Professor
Law School
EXPERTISE
CURRENT RESEARCH INTERESTS
organizational and financial law and economics, economic globalization, and distributive justice
RELATED LINKS
SELECTED PUBLICATIONS
"Primary Goods, Interpersonal Comparisons & Nonstandard Logics" (under revision for Econ. & Phil.)
"Impartiality, Preference Under Identity-Uncertainty, & Counterfactual Choice," (under revision for J. Phil.)
"Primary Goods Revisited (with Mathias Risse, John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University) (under revision for Econ. & Phil.)
"Three (Potential) Pillars of Transnational Economic Justice: The Bretton Woods Instistutions as Guarantors of Global Equal Treatment and Market Completion," in Global Institutions and Responsibilities: Achieving Global Justice (Christian Barry & Thomas W. Pogge eds., forthcoming 2005)
"Whose Ownership? Which Society?," 27 Cardozo Law Review (forthcoming 2005)
"The Deep Grammar of Distribution: A Meta-Theory of Justice," 26 Cardozo Law Review 1179 (2005)
"From "Mission Creep" to Gestalt-Switch: Justice, Finance, the IFIs, and Globalization's Intended Beneficiaries," 37 George Washington International Law Review 167-205 (2005)
"Three (Potential) Pillars of Transnational Economic Justice: The Bretton Woods Institutions as Guarantors of Global Equal Treatment and Market Completion," 26 Metaphilosophy 93 (2005)
"From 'Mission-Creep' to Gestalt-Switch," 98 Proc. of American Society of International Law 69 (2004)
"Just Insurance Through Global Macro-Hedging: Information, Distributive Equity, Efficiency and New Markets for Systemic-Income-Risk-Pricing and -Trading in a 'New Economy,'" 25 University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Economic Law 107-257 (2004)
"From Macro to Micro to 'Mission-Creep': Defending the IMF's Emerging Concern with the Infrastructural Prerequisites to Global Financial Stability," 41 Columbia Journal of Transnational Law 153 (2002)
"Legally Defending 'Mission-Creep': How the Bretton Woods Charters Anticipate and Justify Attention to 'Structural' Variables," 13 International Legal Perspective 34 (2002)