Curriculum Vitae

Full CV (PDF Version)

Employment

  • Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Rochester (2019- )
  • Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Kansas State University (2013-2019)
  • Faculty Fellow, Murphy Center at Tulane University (2016-2017)

Education

  • PhD, Australian National University (2013)
  • MA, Rhodes University (2009)
  • BA (Hons), Bucknell University (2006)

Papers

  • “What Can Adaptive Preferences and Transformative Experiences Teach Each Other?” (forthcoming) in (eds.) Enoch Lambert & John Schwenkler, Becoming Someone New: Essays on Transformative Experience, Choice, and Change (Oxford University Press)
  • “How Politically Liberal Should the Capabilities Approach Want to Be?” (2019) Politics, Philosophy & Economics, online first
  • “Entitlement and Free Time” (2017) Laws, Ethics & Philosophy, 5: 91-104.
  • “Must Adaptive Preferences be Prudentially Bad for Us?” (2017) Journal of the American Philosophical Association,  3(4): 412-429.
  • “When is Non-ideal theory too Ideal? Children, Adaptive Preferences, and Ideal Theory” (2017) in (eds.) Michael Webber & Kevin Vallier, Political Utopias: Contemporary Debates (Oxford University Press)
  • “Conceptualizing Adaptive Preferences Respectfully: An Indirectly Substantive Account” (2016) Journal of Political Philosophy, 23(3): 206-226.
  • “Autonomy and Settling: Rehabilitating the Relationship between Autonomy and Paternalism” (2015) Utilitas, 27(3): 303-325.
  • “Adaptive Preferences: Merging Political Accounts and Well-being Accounts” (2015) Canadian Journal of Philosophy, 45(2): 179-196.
  • “The Perfectionism of Nussbaum’s Adaptive Preferences” (2014) The Journal of Global Ethics, 10(2).
  • “Educating for Autonomy: Liberalism and Autonomy in the Capabilities Approach” (2014), Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 17(3): 443-455 (with Luara Ferracioli).

Teaching

  • PHIL 590: Topics in Philosophy – Contemporary Debates in Feminism (2015)
  • PHIL 525: Advanced Social and Political Philosophy: Philosophy of Race and Gender (2014)
  • PHIL 336: Global Justice (2018)
  • PHIL 335: Social and Political Philosophy (2018)
  • PHIL 330: Moral Philosophy (2013, 2016)
  • PHIL 230: Honors Introduction to Moral Philosophy (2018)
  • PHIL 160: Introduction to Philosophy of Law (2018)
  • PHIL 130: Introduction to Moral Philosophy – Applied Philosophy (2013, 2014, 2015, 2016)
  • PHIL 100: Introduction to Philosophy (2014)