Robert Jubb’s research while affiliated with University of Reading and other places

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Publications (16)


Taking back control
  • Article

March 2020

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15 Reads

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1 Citation

Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy

Robert Jubb

Contemporary egalitarian political philosophy has become increasingly interested in the ways the international order may protect or undermine states’ capacities to deliver domestic egalitarianism. Yet it has not always thought through the complexity or dynamism of interactions between domestic and international politics. These problems can be usefully understood through the problematic the intellectual historian István Hont called jealousy of trade and used to understand eighteenth century European political and philosophical debates. Isaac Nakhimovsky’s work on Johann Gottlieb Fichte’s closed commercial state is particularly helpful given the similarity of some of Fichte’s commitments to those of contemporary internationalising egalitarians.


On What a Distinctively Political Normativity Is

April 2019

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33 Reads

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56 Citations

Political Studies Review

Realists in normative political theory aim to defend the importance of ‘distinctively political thought’ as opposed to the applied ethics they believe characterizes much contemporary political theory and causes it to misunderstand and make mistakes about its subject matter. More conventional political theorists have attempted to respond to realism, including Jonathan Leader Maynard and Alex Worsnip, who have recently criticized five supposedly realist arguments for a distinctive political normativity. However, while Leader Maynard and Worsnip’s arguments are themselves less decisive than they suppose, the problem with their response may lay elsewhere. Their response supposes that more conventional political theory could, in principle, be defended at an abstract general level. This may not be possible though, given the difficulty of arriving at agreed interpretations of the concepts involved and the desiderata for a successful normative political theory. It also risks missing the point of realism, which is to use different forms of normative inquiry to explore questions which have not always been central to conventional normative political theory. Judith Shklar’s excellent work on vices and the liberalism of fear nicely illustrates this problem.


Disaggregating Political Authority: What’s Wrong with Rawlsian Civil Disobedience?

February 2019

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66 Reads

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19 Citations

Political Studies

John Rawls is a central figure in contemporary philosophical and theoretical discussions of civil disobedience, which hope to contribute to significant political debates around when and in which forms political dissent, protest and resistance are appropriate. Ignoring the frame in which Rawls discusses civil disobedience has led critics to wrongly attack his theory for being too restrictive when it is more likely to be too permissive. That permissiveness depends on treating any political order which does not come close to fulfilling his theory of justice as absolutely illegitimate. In this sense, Rawls’ theory of political authority is binary and demanding. The problems his theory shares with most others, including his critics’, show that political authority needs to be disaggregated to make sense of the conditions under which different forms of protest and resistance are appropriate.


NORMS, EVALUATIONS, and IDEAL and NONIDEAL THEORY

October 2016

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10 Reads

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7 Citations

Social Philosophy and Policy

This essay discusses the relation between ideal theory and two forms of political moralism identified by Bernard Williams, structural and enactment views. It argues that ideal theory, at least in the sense Rawls used that term, only makes sense for structural forms of moralism. These theories see their task as describing the constraints that properly apply to political agents and institutions. As a result, they are primarily concerned with norms that govern action. In contrast, many critiques of ideal theory are structured and motivated by their commitment to an enactment model of political theorizing. This instead sees political agents and institutions as instruments for producing or promoting better states of affairs. Enactment models treat the evaluations that rank different states of affairs as justificatorily basic, rather than norms governing action on which structural models focus. This reveals an important feature of debates about ideal theory. Whether ideal theory is capable of appropriately guiding action will depend on what the criteria for appropriately guiding action are, about which different theorists have importantly different views. For example, some popular strategies for defending ideal theory fail, while it may be much less clear that some alternatives to ideal theory can provide action guidance than their advocates claim.


The Real Value of Equality

April 2015

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64 Reads

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55 Citations

The Journal of Politics

This article investigates how political theorists and philosophers should understand egalitarian political demands in light of the increasingly important realist critique of much of contemporary political theory and philosophy. It suggests, first, that what Martin O’Neill has called non-intrinsic egalitarianism is, in one form at least, a potentially realistic egalitarian political project and, second, that realists may be compelled to impose an egalitarian threshold on state claims to legitimacy under certain circumstances. Non-intrinsic egalitarianism can meet realism’s methodological requirements because it does not have to assume an unavailable moral consensus since it can focus on widely acknowledged bads rather than contentious claims about the good. Further, an appropriately formulated non-intrinsic egalitarianism may be a minimum requirement of an appropriately realistic claim by a political order to authoritatively structure some of its members’ lives. Without at least a threshold set of egalitarian commitments, a political order seems unable to be transparent to many of its worse-off members under a plausible construal of contemporary conditions.



‘Recover it From the Facts as We Know Them’

November 2014

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17 Reads

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28 Citations

Journal of Moral Philosophy

In Andrea Sangiovanni’s words, practice-dependent theorists hold that “[t]he content, scope, and justification of a conception of [a given value] depends on the structure and form of the practices that the conception is intended to govern”. They have tended to present this as methodologically innovative, but here I point to the similarities between the methodological commitments of contemporary practice-dependent theorists and others, particularly P. F. Strawson in his Freedom and Resentment and Bernard Williams in general. I suggest that by looking at what Strawson and Williams did, we can add to the reasons for adopting one form or another of practice-dependence. The internal complexity of the practices we hope our principles will govern may require it. However, this defence of practice-dependence also puts pressure on self-identified practice-dependence theorists, suggesting that they need to do more work to justify the interpretations of the practices their theories rely on.


Playing Kant at the Court of King Arthur

May 2014

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29 Reads

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55 Citations

Political Studies

This article contrasts the sense in which those whom Bernard Williams called ‘political realists’ and John Rawls are committed to the idea that political philosophy has to be distinctively political. Distinguishing the realist critique of political moralism from debates over ideal and non-ideal theory, it is argued that Rawls is more realist than many realists realise, and that realists can learn more about how to make a distinctively political vision of how our life together should be organised from his theorising, although it also points to a worrying tendency among Rawlsians to reach for inappropriately moralised arguments. G. A. Cohen's advocacy of socialism and the second season of HBO's The Wire are used as examples to illustrate these points.


Social connection and practice dependence: Some recent developments in the global justice literature: Iris Marion Young, Responsibility for Justice. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011; And Ayelet Banai, Miriam Ronzoni and Christian Schemmel, Social Justice, Global Dynamics. Oxford: Routledge, 2011

December 2013

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82 Reads

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2 Citations

Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy

This review essay discusses two recent attempts to reform the framework in which issues of international and global justice are discussed: Iris Marion Young's ‘social connection' model and the practice-dependent approach, here exemplified by Ayelet Banai, Miriam Ronzoni and Christian Schemmel's edited collection. I argue that while Young's model may fit some issues of international or global justice, it misconceives the problems that many of them pose. Indeed, its difficulties point precisely in the direction of practice dependence as it is presented by Banai et al. I go on to discuss what seem to be the strengths of that method, and particularly Banai et al.'s defence of it against the common claim that it is biased towards the status quo. I also discuss Andrea Sangiovanni and Kate MacDonald's contributions to the collection.


Political Norms and Moral Values
  • Article
  • Full-text available

January 2013

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2,701 Reads

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43 Citations

SSRN Electronic Journal

Is genuinely normative political theory necessarily informed by distinctively moral values? Eva Erman and Niklas Möller (2013) answer that question affirmatively, and highlight its centrality in the debate on the prospects of political realism, which explicitly eschews pre-political moral foundations. In this comment we defend the emerging realist current. After briefly presenting Erman and Möller's position, we (i) observe that freedom and equality are not obviously moral values in the way they assume, and (ii) argue that a non-moral distinction between politics and sheer domination can give us a distinctively political normativity. The two points are related but freestanding.

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Citations (13)


... to do with how moral norms and prescriptions are 'filtered through' the realities of politics such that they are altered by politics' constitutive features (Sleat 2022;Jubb 2019;Hall 2017). While the former 'non-moral' view of political normativity has been severely criticized (Erman and Möller 2015, 2022a, 2022b, 2023aMaynard and Worsnip 2018), the latter 'filter view' has remained underdeveloped and vague. ...

Reference:

The Role of Moral Norms in Political Theory
On What a Distinctively Political Normativity Is
  • Citing Article
  • April 2019

Political Studies Review

... Interestingly, the kind of considerations made by non-ideal theorists is also typically made by realists committed to the moral view mentioned in the introduction, for example, concerning how the constitutive features of politics alter different kinds of moral (and other) considerations. Yet, some realists often claim that non-ideal theory and the issue of feasibility are orthogonal to realism(Rossi and Sleat 2014;Jubb 2016). ...

NORMS, EVALUATIONS, and IDEAL and NONIDEAL THEORY
  • Citing Article
  • October 2016

Social Philosophy and Policy

... First, continued defence is needed against key objections, including the two mentioned above. Second, expanded engagement is needed with the developing data, thus refining our picture of what's best given the 'facts as we know them' (Jubb, 2016). Third, creative thinking is needed about new experiments worth trying, as well as theoretical analysis of what would constitute, in general, a sensible experiment under inevitably uncertain conditions. ...

‘Recover it From the Facts as We Know Them’
  • Citing Article
  • November 2014

Journal of Moral Philosophy

... Others argue that, in the context of punishment, it may be moral to intentionally cause harm [53]. Still other philosophers point out that moral responsibility for harms, when it exists, sometimes attaches not to individuals but to collectives [8,29,43,47]. Despite the centrality of harm for moral and political philosophy and for metaphysics, philosophers have paid virtually no attention to HR. ...

Contribution to Collective Harms and Responsibility
  • Citing Article
  • December 2012

Ethical Perspectives

... The tasks of the tribunate connect to pragmatist conceptions of democracy, which also eschew a moral justification of democracy in favor of stressing the superior conflict management of democratic decision-making (e.g., Bagg 2018; Knight and Johnson 2011). In as far as we conceive of the tribunate as an institutional innovation tasked with enabling societies to address the conflicts that threaten to drive them apart, it could serve as a catalyst for a realist understanding of democracy as primarily a political value, tied to managing conflicts and creating broadly accepted forms of political order, rather than realizing moral ideals (Hall and Sleat 2017;Jubb andRossi 2015a, 2015b). ...

Why Moralists Should Be Afraid of Political Values in advance
  • Citing Article
  • January 2015

Journal of Philosophical Research

... You can encrypt the data before inserting it to the DB and the blockchain to save it, this step will make your security stronger by making a function that will compare the hashed data that we have in the DB and the hashed data in the blockchain to check that all the information that was imported from them that is verified and not manipulated by any outsiders. Implementing the healthcare system using blockchain technology, Python tools such as pyQT5, MySQL database, and DBeaver app will provide a secure and efficient way to manage medical records [24][25][26]. The system will revolutionize the healthcare industry by enabling patients to take control of their medical records and ensuring that medical information is accurate, secure, and accessible to authorized individuals [27,28]. ...

The Real Value of Equality
  • Citing Article
  • April 2015

The Journal of Politics

... Nevertheless, if what is advised, even if true or well justified, can be predicted with good reason to have bad effects inasmuch as the advice is misrepresented, misunderstood or misused, the philosopher should consider whether still to offer the advice. Indeed, as Jubba and Kurtlumus (2012) argue the adviser ought to remain silent and not publish the advice. ...

No Country for Honest Men: Political Philosophers and Real Politics
  • Citing Article
  • October 2012

Political Studies

... Williams' realist thought on legitimacy and legitimation has served as a cornerstone of debates in political theory about the delimitation of politics (e.g., Cozzaglio & Greene, 2019;Cross, 2020;Forrester, 2012;Freeden, 2012;Hall, 2015;Jubb, 2015;Prinz, 2022;Sagar, 2018;Sleat, 2013Sleat, , 2014b. More important still, his legitimacy-focused account of politics is an example of a widely used conceptualization of politics. ...

Playing Kant at the Court of King Arthur
  • Citing Article
  • May 2014

Political Studies