Taking Responsibility for Children
Herausgeber: Brennan, Samantha; Noggle, Robert
Taking Responsibility for Children
Herausgeber: Brennan, Samantha; Noggle, Robert
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What do we as a society, and as parents in particular, owe to our children? Each chapter in Taking Responsibility for Children offers part of an answer to that question. Although they vary in the approaches they take and the conclusions they draw, each contributor explores some aspect of the moral obligations owed to children by their caregivers. Some focus primarily on the responsibilities of parents, while others focus on the responsibilities of society and government. The essays reflect a mix of concern with the practical and the philosophical aspects of taking responsibility for children,…mehr
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What do we as a society, and as parents in particular, owe to our children? Each chapter in Taking Responsibility for Children offers part of an answer to that question. Although they vary in the approaches they take and the conclusions they draw, each contributor explores some aspect of the moral obligations owed to children by their caregivers. Some focus primarily on the responsibilities of parents, while others focus on the responsibilities of society and government. The essays reflect a mix of concern with the practical and the philosophical aspects of taking responsibility for children, addressing such topics as parental obligations, the rights and entitlements of children, the responsibility of the state, the role and nature of public education in a liberal society, the best ways to ensure adequate child protection, the licensing of parents, children's religious education, and children's health. Taking Responsibility for Children will be of interest to philosophers, advocates for children's interests, and those interested in public policy, especially as it relates to children and families.
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Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
- Seitenzahl: 210
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Dezember 2007
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 152mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 318g
- ISBN-13: 9781554580156
- ISBN-10: 1554580153
- Artikelnr.: 26273627
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Wilfrid Laurier University Press
- Seitenzahl: 210
- Erscheinungstermin: 4. Dezember 2007
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 226mm x 152mm x 15mm
- Gewicht: 318g
- ISBN-13: 9781554580156
- ISBN-10: 1554580153
- Artikelnr.: 26273627
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
Table of Contents for
Taking Responsibility for Children, edited by Samantha Brennan and Robert
Noggle
INTRODUCTION
Taking Responsibility for Children Robert Noggle and Samantha Brennan
ONE
Raising Children: Who Is Responsible for What? Colin M. MacLeod
TWO
Parental Responsibility Jan Narveson
THREE
Children, Caregivers, Friends Amy Mullin
FOUR
Parent Licensing and the Protecting of Children Mark C. Vopat
FIVE
Responsibility and Children's Rights: The Case for Restricting Parental
Smoking Samantha Brennan and Angela White
SIX
Political Liberalism and Moral Education: Reflections on Mozart v. Hawkins
Marc Ramsay
SEVEN
Education in a Liberal Society: Implications of Ross Waren Wendling
EIGHT
Could There Be a Right Not to Be Born an Octuplet? Laura M. Purdy
Bibliography
Index
Notes on Contributors
Colin M. Macleod is Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy and
the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria. He is the author
Liberalism, Justice and Markets (OUP 1998) and co-editor with David Archard
of The Moral and Political Status of Children (OUP 2002).
Amy Mullin is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Toronto. She is
the author of Reconceiving Pregnancy and Childcare (Cambridge 2005), along
with articles in feminist philosophy, the history of philosophy, and
aesthetics. She has three children.
Jan Narveson is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of the University of
Waterloo, after teaching there for more than forty years. He is the author
of The Libertarian Idea, Respecting Persons in Theory and Practice, Moral
Matters, and various others. He is the father of three and devotes a lot of
his life to organizing chamber music concerts.
Laura M. Purdy received a PhD from Stanford University and is Professor of
Philosophy and Ruth and Albert Koch Professor of Humanities at Wells
College, where she has been based since 1979. Her areas of specialization
are applied ethics, primarily bioethics, reproductive ethics, family
issues, and feminism. She is author of In Their Best Interest? The Case
against Equal Rights for Children and Reproducing Persons: Issues in
Feminist Bioethics and co-editor of Feminist Perspectives in Medical Ethics
(with Helen B. Holmes), Violence against Women: Philosophical Perspectives
(with Stanley French and Wanda Teays), Embodying Bioethics: Recent Feminist
Advances (with Anne Donchin), and Bioethics, Justice, and Health Care
(with Wanda Teays), as well as many articles.
Marc Ramsay is Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy at
Acadia University. In addition to children's rights, his current research
interests include the role of the harm principle in constitutional law and
the relevance of religious beliefs to the law of torts.
Mark C. Vopat is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Youngstown State
University in Youngstown, Ohio. His research interests are in moral and
political philosophy, particularly in the areas of children's rights,
education, distributive justice, and justice and technology. He has written
recently on issues of justice, religion, and a child's right to an
education, as well as on issues in professional ethics. His homepage can be
found at www.as.ysu.edu/~philrel/faculty/vopat/Vopat.html.
Karen Wendling is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of
Guelph in Guelph, Ontario. Most of her publications are on egalitarianism,
broadly conceived. She also has a long-standing interest in the political
development of children from unfree and unequal subjects into free and
equal citizens.
Angela White is a doctoral student in Philosophy at the University of
Western Ontario. Her research interests are in political philosophy and
social justice, health care ethics, and feminist ethics. She has published
and presented work on ethical issues related to reproductive technologies,
particularly in vitro fertilization and human embryo stem cell research.
Her homepage is at http://publish.uwo.ca/~awhite33/.
Taking Responsibility for Children, edited by Samantha Brennan and Robert
Noggle
INTRODUCTION
Taking Responsibility for Children Robert Noggle and Samantha Brennan
ONE
Raising Children: Who Is Responsible for What? Colin M. MacLeod
TWO
Parental Responsibility Jan Narveson
THREE
Children, Caregivers, Friends Amy Mullin
FOUR
Parent Licensing and the Protecting of Children Mark C. Vopat
FIVE
Responsibility and Children's Rights: The Case for Restricting Parental
Smoking Samantha Brennan and Angela White
SIX
Political Liberalism and Moral Education: Reflections on Mozart v. Hawkins
Marc Ramsay
SEVEN
Education in a Liberal Society: Implications of Ross Waren Wendling
EIGHT
Could There Be a Right Not to Be Born an Octuplet? Laura M. Purdy
Bibliography
Index
Notes on Contributors
Colin M. Macleod is Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy and
the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria. He is the author
Liberalism, Justice and Markets (OUP 1998) and co-editor with David Archard
of The Moral and Political Status of Children (OUP 2002).
Amy Mullin is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Toronto. She is
the author of Reconceiving Pregnancy and Childcare (Cambridge 2005), along
with articles in feminist philosophy, the history of philosophy, and
aesthetics. She has three children.
Jan Narveson is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of the University of
Waterloo, after teaching there for more than forty years. He is the author
of The Libertarian Idea, Respecting Persons in Theory and Practice, Moral
Matters, and various others. He is the father of three and devotes a lot of
his life to organizing chamber music concerts.
Laura M. Purdy received a PhD from Stanford University and is Professor of
Philosophy and Ruth and Albert Koch Professor of Humanities at Wells
College, where she has been based since 1979. Her areas of specialization
are applied ethics, primarily bioethics, reproductive ethics, family
issues, and feminism. She is author of In Their Best Interest? The Case
against Equal Rights for Children and Reproducing Persons: Issues in
Feminist Bioethics and co-editor of Feminist Perspectives in Medical Ethics
(with Helen B. Holmes), Violence against Women: Philosophical Perspectives
(with Stanley French and Wanda Teays), Embodying Bioethics: Recent Feminist
Advances (with Anne Donchin), and Bioethics, Justice, and Health Care
(with Wanda Teays), as well as many articles.
Marc Ramsay is Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy at
Acadia University. In addition to children's rights, his current research
interests include the role of the harm principle in constitutional law and
the relevance of religious beliefs to the law of torts.
Mark C. Vopat is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Youngstown State
University in Youngstown, Ohio. His research interests are in moral and
political philosophy, particularly in the areas of children's rights,
education, distributive justice, and justice and technology. He has written
recently on issues of justice, religion, and a child's right to an
education, as well as on issues in professional ethics. His homepage can be
found at www.as.ysu.edu/~philrel/faculty/vopat/Vopat.html.
Karen Wendling is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of
Guelph in Guelph, Ontario. Most of her publications are on egalitarianism,
broadly conceived. She also has a long-standing interest in the political
development of children from unfree and unequal subjects into free and
equal citizens.
Angela White is a doctoral student in Philosophy at the University of
Western Ontario. Her research interests are in political philosophy and
social justice, health care ethics, and feminist ethics. She has published
and presented work on ethical issues related to reproductive technologies,
particularly in vitro fertilization and human embryo stem cell research.
Her homepage is at http://publish.uwo.ca/~awhite33/.
Table of Contents for
Taking Responsibility for Children, edited by Samantha Brennan and Robert
Noggle
INTRODUCTION
Taking Responsibility for Children Robert Noggle and Samantha Brennan
ONE
Raising Children: Who Is Responsible for What? Colin M. MacLeod
TWO
Parental Responsibility Jan Narveson
THREE
Children, Caregivers, Friends Amy Mullin
FOUR
Parent Licensing and the Protecting of Children Mark C. Vopat
FIVE
Responsibility and Children's Rights: The Case for Restricting Parental
Smoking Samantha Brennan and Angela White
SIX
Political Liberalism and Moral Education: Reflections on Mozart v. Hawkins
Marc Ramsay
SEVEN
Education in a Liberal Society: Implications of Ross Waren Wendling
EIGHT
Could There Be a Right Not to Be Born an Octuplet? Laura M. Purdy
Bibliography
Index
Notes on Contributors
Colin M. Macleod is Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy and
the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria. He is the author
Liberalism, Justice and Markets (OUP 1998) and co-editor with David Archard
of The Moral and Political Status of Children (OUP 2002).
Amy Mullin is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Toronto. She is
the author of Reconceiving Pregnancy and Childcare (Cambridge 2005), along
with articles in feminist philosophy, the history of philosophy, and
aesthetics. She has three children.
Jan Narveson is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of the University of
Waterloo, after teaching there for more than forty years. He is the author
of The Libertarian Idea, Respecting Persons in Theory and Practice, Moral
Matters, and various others. He is the father of three and devotes a lot of
his life to organizing chamber music concerts.
Laura M. Purdy received a PhD from Stanford University and is Professor of
Philosophy and Ruth and Albert Koch Professor of Humanities at Wells
College, where she has been based since 1979. Her areas of specialization
are applied ethics, primarily bioethics, reproductive ethics, family
issues, and feminism. She is author of In Their Best Interest? The Case
against Equal Rights for Children and Reproducing Persons: Issues in
Feminist Bioethics and co-editor of Feminist Perspectives in Medical Ethics
(with Helen B. Holmes), Violence against Women: Philosophical Perspectives
(with Stanley French and Wanda Teays), Embodying Bioethics: Recent Feminist
Advances (with Anne Donchin), and Bioethics, Justice, and Health Care
(with Wanda Teays), as well as many articles.
Marc Ramsay is Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy at
Acadia University. In addition to children's rights, his current research
interests include the role of the harm principle in constitutional law and
the relevance of religious beliefs to the law of torts.
Mark C. Vopat is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Youngstown State
University in Youngstown, Ohio. His research interests are in moral and
political philosophy, particularly in the areas of children's rights,
education, distributive justice, and justice and technology. He has written
recently on issues of justice, religion, and a child's right to an
education, as well as on issues in professional ethics. His homepage can be
found at www.as.ysu.edu/~philrel/faculty/vopat/Vopat.html.
Karen Wendling is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of
Guelph in Guelph, Ontario. Most of her publications are on egalitarianism,
broadly conceived. She also has a long-standing interest in the political
development of children from unfree and unequal subjects into free and
equal citizens.
Angela White is a doctoral student in Philosophy at the University of
Western Ontario. Her research interests are in political philosophy and
social justice, health care ethics, and feminist ethics. She has published
and presented work on ethical issues related to reproductive technologies,
particularly in vitro fertilization and human embryo stem cell research.
Her homepage is at http://publish.uwo.ca/~awhite33/.
Taking Responsibility for Children, edited by Samantha Brennan and Robert
Noggle
INTRODUCTION
Taking Responsibility for Children Robert Noggle and Samantha Brennan
ONE
Raising Children: Who Is Responsible for What? Colin M. MacLeod
TWO
Parental Responsibility Jan Narveson
THREE
Children, Caregivers, Friends Amy Mullin
FOUR
Parent Licensing and the Protecting of Children Mark C. Vopat
FIVE
Responsibility and Children's Rights: The Case for Restricting Parental
Smoking Samantha Brennan and Angela White
SIX
Political Liberalism and Moral Education: Reflections on Mozart v. Hawkins
Marc Ramsay
SEVEN
Education in a Liberal Society: Implications of Ross Waren Wendling
EIGHT
Could There Be a Right Not to Be Born an Octuplet? Laura M. Purdy
Bibliography
Index
Notes on Contributors
Colin M. Macleod is Associate Professor in the Department of Philosophy and
the Faculty of Law at the University of Victoria. He is the author
Liberalism, Justice and Markets (OUP 1998) and co-editor with David Archard
of The Moral and Political Status of Children (OUP 2002).
Amy Mullin is Professor of Philosophy at the University of Toronto. She is
the author of Reconceiving Pregnancy and Childcare (Cambridge 2005), along
with articles in feminist philosophy, the history of philosophy, and
aesthetics. She has three children.
Jan Narveson is Distinguished Professor Emeritus of the University of
Waterloo, after teaching there for more than forty years. He is the author
of The Libertarian Idea, Respecting Persons in Theory and Practice, Moral
Matters, and various others. He is the father of three and devotes a lot of
his life to organizing chamber music concerts.
Laura M. Purdy received a PhD from Stanford University and is Professor of
Philosophy and Ruth and Albert Koch Professor of Humanities at Wells
College, where she has been based since 1979. Her areas of specialization
are applied ethics, primarily bioethics, reproductive ethics, family
issues, and feminism. She is author of In Their Best Interest? The Case
against Equal Rights for Children and Reproducing Persons: Issues in
Feminist Bioethics and co-editor of Feminist Perspectives in Medical Ethics
(with Helen B. Holmes), Violence against Women: Philosophical Perspectives
(with Stanley French and Wanda Teays), Embodying Bioethics: Recent Feminist
Advances (with Anne Donchin), and Bioethics, Justice, and Health Care
(with Wanda Teays), as well as many articles.
Marc Ramsay is Assistant Professor in the Department of Philosophy at
Acadia University. In addition to children's rights, his current research
interests include the role of the harm principle in constitutional law and
the relevance of religious beliefs to the law of torts.
Mark C. Vopat is Assistant Professor of Philosophy at Youngstown State
University in Youngstown, Ohio. His research interests are in moral and
political philosophy, particularly in the areas of children's rights,
education, distributive justice, and justice and technology. He has written
recently on issues of justice, religion, and a child's right to an
education, as well as on issues in professional ethics. His homepage can be
found at www.as.ysu.edu/~philrel/faculty/vopat/Vopat.html.
Karen Wendling is Associate Professor of Philosophy at the University of
Guelph in Guelph, Ontario. Most of her publications are on egalitarianism,
broadly conceived. She also has a long-standing interest in the political
development of children from unfree and unequal subjects into free and
equal citizens.
Angela White is a doctoral student in Philosophy at the University of
Western Ontario. Her research interests are in political philosophy and
social justice, health care ethics, and feminist ethics. She has published
and presented work on ethical issues related to reproductive technologies,
particularly in vitro fertilization and human embryo stem cell research.
Her homepage is at http://publish.uwo.ca/~awhite33/.