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Call for Publications

Theme: Reparations for Historical Injustice
Subtitle: What is Owed to the Victims of Injustices?
Publication: Ethical Perspectives
Date: Special Issue (September 2023)
Deadline: 28.2.2023

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Description:

Are there reasons to redress historical injustices? If the answer is
affirmative, how strong are those reasons? Any cursory examination of
current public institutions or present holdings quickly reveals that
many of them are partially the result of past injustices. Several
modern states were founded on the enslavement and killing of
indigenous and other populations, as well as the theft of their lands
and property. Further, it was not until well into the 20th century
that many of these same states granted women the right to vote and
participate in politics. Although states may be able to render good
conditions of life for a significant number of their residents, their
institutions may be profoundly tainted, and many past injustices
continue to affect currently living people. In the light of these
considerations, redressing the past remains an important problem.
However, on what grounds, if any, should justice be concerned about
past injustice?

Ethical Perspectives invites contributions that engage with ideas and
arguments that critically analyze and respond to the wide range of
themes and perspectives on how to respond to historical injustices.
Some questions that papers could focus on are:

- ​​Does it matter if an existing disadvantage was caused by a past
  injustice?
- What do contemporary actors owe to the victims of historical
  injustices? What can they be realistically expected to owe victims
  of past injustices?
- If a group or individual was damaged through a past injustice but
  is now well-off, should justice be concerned with redressing the
  past injustice, or should justice only be concerned  with correcting
  the present disadvantage?
- To what extent should justice be concerned with the structure of
  the relationship between parties and aims in reconciliation?
- Is it morally relevant how victims respond to past injustices?
- Do claims based on “historical injustice” give rise to strong
  claims today? Or is the language of “historical injustice” too
  backward-looking?
- Does the fact that an injustice occurred in the past have
  independent normative relevance, or does it only have normative
  relevance if its legacies persist today?
- Does the mere fact of having been benefited or enriched from
  historical injustices give rise to duties of reparation?
- Are the duties of the beneficiary of past injustices limited to the
  disgorgement of the benefit unjustly acquired?
- How could the supersession thesis be critically reconstructed,
  applied to empirical cases, and further criticized?
- Do indigenous perspectives, ways of thinking and customs require us
  to approach the issue of justice in fundamentally different ways?
- Is there any relationship between historical injustices and
  irregular migration?
- Does the past impose limits upon current public institutions? Do
  historical injustices limit how public institutions should be
  designed?

Papers that address other, although similar, research questions are
also welcomed.

Invited contributors include: David Miller, Linda Bosniak, David
Heyd, Cara Nine, Daniel Loewe, and Margaret Moore and Michael Luoma.

Papers should be submitted by February 28, 2023, and should be
between 6.000 and 9.000 words in length. Manuscripts must be adjusted
to the Ethical Perspectives house style.

Expected date of publication: September 2023

Manuscripts are to be submitted by e-mail to:
santiago.truccone-borgo...@uni-graz.at and santiagotrucc...@gmail.com

All submissions will undergo a double-blind refereeing process.
Please note that the journal’s Editor-in-Chief and Managing Editor
will have the final word on publication decisions.

Guest Editor:
Santiago Truccone-Borgogno
Institute of Philosophy, University of Graz
Email: santiagotrucc...@gmail.com






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