Disability and Disadvantage
Edited by Kimberley Brownlee and Adam Cureton
Author Information
Kimberley Brownlee is a Professor of Philosophy at the University of British Columbia. Her current research focuses on sociability, social rights, loneliness, and freedom of association. She is the author of Being Sure of Each Other: An Essay on Social Rights and Freedoms (Oxford 2020), Conscience and Conviction: The Case for Civil Disobedience (Oxford 2012), co-editor of Disability and Disadvantage (Oxford 2009, with Adam Cureton), and co-editor of The Blackwell Companion to Applied Philosophy (Wiley 2016, with David Coady and Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen).
Adam Cureton is a doctoral candidate in philosophy at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He holds a BPhil in philosophy from Oxford University where he studied as a Rhodes Scholar. Adam is a fellow at the Parr Center for Ethics and holds fellowships from the National Science Foundation, the Dolores Zohrab Liebmann Foundation and the Institute for Humane Studies. His research interests lie primarily in ethics, metaethics and the history of ethics.
Contributors:
Norman Daniels, Harvard School of Public Health
Ellen Daniels Zide, New York University School of Medicine
Leslie P. Francis, University of Utah
Christie Hartley, Georgia State University
Richard Hull, National University of Ireland, Galway
Guy Kahane, Oxford University
F. M. Kamm, Harvard University
Rosalind McDougall, University of Melbourne
Jeff McMahan, Rutgers University
Douglas MacLean, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Susannah Rose, Edmond J. Safra Foundation Center for Ethics, and Doctoral Candidate, Harvard University Program in Ethics and Health
Anita Silvers, San Francisco State University
Julian Savulescu, Oxford University
Lorella Terzi, Roehampton University
David Wasserman, Yeshiva University
Jonathan Wolff, University College London