More on the Referee Crisis, Neoliberalism, & Sad Beige Philosophy (SBP)

This is part of a 3-part series. You can find the first and third posts here and here. In my last post, I wrote about the referee crisis and its relationship to neoliberalism. In short, there’s a backlog of papers in the publication pipeline because there aren’t enough referees to review them. Why aren’t there […]

The Referee Crisis, Neoliberalism, & Sad Beige Philosophy

This is part of a 3-part series. You can find the second and third posts here and here. This post is dedicated to the generous philosofriends who refereed papers for me. Last month, I finished editing a special issue of Feminist Philosophy Quarterly on feminist perspectives on moral responsibility, which is (miraculously) scheduled to be published in […]

CFP: Compositing Man: Worldly-ecologies & Life/Death Affirming Perspectives (deadline: Mar. 15, 2024)

Compositing Man: Worldly-ecologies & Life/Death Affirming PerspectivesGuest Editors: Xalli Zúñiga & Stephanie Rivera BerruzphiloSOPHIA: Journal of Transcontinental Philosophy Feminism The colonial dynamics by which global capitalism asserts its dominance, establishing itself as the Earth’s prevailing economic system, give rise to metabolic rifts that tamper with the relations that make life possible. Through colonization, global capitalism […]

Feminist Approaches to Logic

Feminist Approaches to Logic Workshop Ángeles ErañaMaureen EckertThomas M. FergusonAxel Arturo BarcelóRoy T. CookGillian Russell Tuesday January 9th, 11:00 – 19:00Wednesday January 10th, 10:00 – 17:30 Sala José Gaos (main floor, IIFs-UNAM, Mexico City)Live broadcast on: https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=filosoficas No habrá traducción simultáneaFurther Information: non.logic.iif@gmail.comOrganized by Sandra D. Cuenca, Luis Estrada González and Miguel Ángel Trejo Huerta

Registration is Now Open for Philosophy, Disability and Social Change 4 (#PhiDisSocCh4), Oxford Online, Dec. 14-15

You can now register for Philosophy, Disability and Social Change 4 (#PhiDisSocCh4)!! Registration for the conference is free and open to everyone. To register and get the conference programme, follow the link below to the conference webpage at the University of Oxford website: https://www.bsg.ox.ac.uk/events/philosophy-disability-and-social-change-4-phidissocch4 Philosophy, Disability and Social Change 4 is generously supported by the […]

Registration for Ethics After the Pandemic, Hybrid, Sat. Apr. 15, 2023

I have copied below the poster for Ethics After the Pandemic, the symposium taking place this Saturday at Salisbury University from 9:00am to 3:30pm EST. Karen Stohr and I will give keynotes in the morning and three panels will be held in the afternoon. To join the symposium by Zoom, go here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/43rd-annual-salisbury-university-philosophy-symposium-tickets-553421337117 Description of […]

Another Update on The Bloomsbury Guide to Philosophy of Disability

Some readers/listeners of BIOPOLITICAL PHILOSOPHY have asked about the upcoming publication of The Bloomsbury Guide to Philosophy of Disability. The production process has remained roughly on schedule: the book will be out in the late Spring/early Summer. The contributions to the collection have been edited and revised. I am extremely pleased with the outcomes. I […]

The Universalist/Localist Dilemma

Everyone of us, non-Westerners, BIPOC, BAME, immigrants, disabled folks, women, etc. who has tried to develop a career in science, philosophy, art, literature or in academia in general knows well the loose-loose dilemma of having to decide whether to try to contribute to philosophy, science, art, whatever as it is already recognised in mainstream metropolitan […]

CFP: Intellectual Ability and Disability: New Questions for Philosophy of Education (deadline: Dec. 1, 2019)*

Special Issue of Philosophical Inquiry in Education (PIE)Co-edited by Ashley Taylor (Colgate University) and Kevin McDonough (McGill University) Intellectual Ability and Disability: New Questions for Philosophy of Education Although philosophy and disability studies have often been regarded as disparate fields, philosophers have become increasingly interested in applying the insights from disability studies scholarship and activism to debates […]