1.
A Companion to Contemporary Political Philosophy. (Wiley, 2017). doi:10.1002/9781405177245.
2.
Wolff, J. An introduction to political philosophy. (Oxford University Press, 2006).
3.
Simmons, A. J. Moral principles and political obligations. (Princeton University Press, 1979).
4.
Horton, J. Political obligation. vol. Issues in political theory (Macmillan, 1992).
5.
Richard B. Friedman. On the Concept of Authority in Political Philosophy. in Political obligation vol. Issues in political theory (Macmillan, 1992).
6.
Robert P. Wolff. The Conflict Between Authority and Autonomy’. in In defense of anarchism vol. Harper essays in philosophy (Harper & Row, 1976).
7.
Harry G. Frankfurt. The Anarchism of Robert Paul Wolff. Political Theory 1, 405–414 (1973).
8.
Green, L. The authority of the state. (Clarendon, 1988).
9.
Richard Tuck. Why is Authority Such a Problem? in Philosophy, politics and society: 4th series (Blackwell, 1972).
10.
Jo Wolff. Anarchism and Skepticism. in For and against the state: new philosophical readings vol. Studies in social, political, and legal philosophy (Rowman & Littlefield, 1996).
11.
John Simmons. Philosophical Anarchism. in For and against the state: new philosophical readings vol. Studies in social, political, and legal philosophy (Rowman & Littlefield, 1996).
12.
A. John Simmons. Justification and Legitimacy*. Ethics 109, 739–771 (1999).
13.
Richard Dworkin. The Puzzle of Legitimacy’. in Law’s empire (Hart, 1998).
14.
Ripstein, A. Authority and Coercion. Philosophy Public Affairs 32, 2–35 (2004).
15.
Horton, J. Political obligation. vol. Issues in political theory (Macmillan, 1992).
16.
Simmons, A. J. Moral principles and political obligations. (Princeton University Press, 1979).
17.
Miller, D. Anarchism. vol. Modern ideologies (Dent, 1984).
18.
Pitkin, H. Obligation and Consent--I. The American Political Science Review 59, (1965).
19.
Hanna Pitkin. Obligation and Consent--II. The American Political Science Review 60, 39–52 (1966).
20.
Joseph Raz. Authority and Justification. Philosophy & Public Affairs 14, 3–29 (1985).
21.
Patrick Durning. Joseph Raz and the Instrumental Justification of a Duty to Obey the Law. Law and Philosophy 22, 597–620 (2003).
22.
Locke, J., Locke, J. & Gough, J. W. The second treatise of civil government: and, A letter concerning toleration. (Basil Blackwell, 1948).
23.
Hume, D. & MacIntyre, A. C. Hume’s ethical writings: selections from David Hume. (University of Notre Dame Press, 1979).
24.
A. John Simmons. Tacit Consent and Political Obligation. Philosophy & Public Affairs 5, 274–291 (1976).
25.
Simmons, A. J. Moral principles and political obligations. (Princeton University Press, 1979).
26.
John Horton. Chapters 2,3,4,. in Political obligation vol. Issues in political theory (Macmillan, 1992).
27.
Beran, H. The consent theory of political obligation. vol. Croom Helm international series in social and political thought (Croom Helm).
28.
Ronald Dworkin. The Original Position. The University of Chicago Law Review 40, 500–533 (1973).
29.
Margaret Gilbert. Reconsidering the ‘Actual Contract’ and Theory of Political Obligation*. Ethics 109, 236–260 (1999).
30.
Darwall, S. Authority, Accountability, and Preemption. Jurisprudence 2, 103–119 (2011).
31.
Daniel Star & Candice Delmas. Three Conceptions of Practical Authority. Jurisprudence 21, 143–160.
32.
May, T. On Raz and the Obligation to Obey the Law. Law and Philosophy 16, 19–36.
33.
Pateman, C. The problem of political obligation: a critique of liberal theory. (Polity in association with Blackwell, 1985).
34.
Hanna Pitkin. Obligation and Consent--II. The American Political Science Review 60, 39–52 (1966).
35.
A. John Simmons. Tacit Consent and Political Obligation. Philosophy & Public Affairs 5, 274–291 (1976).
36.
John Horton. Chapters 2,3,4,. in Political obligation vol. Issues in political theory (Macmillan, 1992).
37.
George Klosko. Presumptive Benefit, Fairness, and Political Obligation. Philosophy & Public Affairs 16, 241–259 (1987).
38.
Horton, J. In Defence of Associative Political Obligations: Part One. Political Studies 54, 427–443 (2006).
39.
Horton, J. In Defence of Associative Political Obligations: Part Two. Political Studies 55, 1–19 (2007).
40.
Dagger, R. Membership, Fair Play, and Political Obligation. Political Studies 48, 104–117 (2000).
41.
George Klosko. Multiple Principles of Political Obligation. Political Theory 32, 801–824 (2004).
42.
A. John Simmons. Fair Play and Political Obligation: Twenty Years Later. in Justification and Legitimacy (Cambridge University Press, 2000). doi:10.1017/CBO9780511625152.
43.
A. John Simmons. Associative Political Obligations. Ethics 106, 247–273 (1996).
44.
Klosko, G. The principle of fairness and political obligation. vol. Studies in social, political, and legal philosophy (Rowman & Littlefield, 2004).
45.
Richard J. Arneson. The Principle of Fairness and Free-Rider Problems. Ethics 92, 616–633 (1982).
46.
John Rawls. Legal Obligation and the Duty of Fair Play. in Collected papers (Harvard University Press, 1999).
47.
Dworkin, R. Law’s empire. vol. Fontana master guides (Fontana, 1986).
48.
McDermott, D. Fair-Play Obligations. Political Studies 52, 216–232 (2004).
49.
Nozick, R. Anarchy, state, and utopia. (Blackwell, 1974).
50.
Tamir, Y. Liberal nationalism. vol. Studies in moral, political, and legal philosophy (Princeton University Press, 1993).
51.
Andrew Mason. Special Obligations to Compatriots. Ethics 107, 427–447 (1997).
52.
Christopher Heath Wellman. Associative Allegiances and Political Obligations. Social Theory and Practice 23, 181–204 (1997).
53.
Jo Wolff. Political Obligation: A Pluralistic Approach. in Pluralism: the philosophy and politics of diversity (Routledge, 2000).
54.
Rawls, J. A theory of justice. (Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 1999).
55.
Brownlee, K. Features of a Paradigm Case of Civil Disobedience. Res Publica 10, 337–351 (2004).
56.
Dworkin, R. Civil disobedience and nuclear protest. in A matter of principle (Clarendon Press, 1986).
57.
Ronald Dworkin. Civil Disobedience. in Taking rights seriously (Duckworth, 1977).
58.
Brownlee, K. Conscience and Conviction. (Oxford University Press, 2012). doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199592944.001.0001.
59.
LYONS, D. Moral Judgment, Historical Reality, and Civil Disobedience. Philosophy Public Affairs 27, 31–49 (1998).
60.
Haksar, V. Rawls and Gandhi on civil disobedience. Inquiry 19, 151–192 (1976).
61.
Smith, W. Democracy, Deliberation and Disobedience. Res Publica 10, 353–377 (2004).
62.
JOHN MORREALL. The Justifiability of Violent Civil Disobedience. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 6, 35–47 (2013).
63.
Martin L. King. Letter from Birmingham Jail.
64.
Simmons, A. J. Moral principles and political obligations. (Princeton University Press, 1979).
65.
Markovitz, D. ‘Democratic Disobedience’. Yale Law Journal 114, (2005).
66.
David Lefkowitz. On a Moral Right to Civil Disobedience*. Ethics 117, 202–233 (2007).
67.
Singer, P. Democracy and disobedience. (Clarendon Press, 1973).
68.
Adam, J. & Plato. Platonis Crito. vol. Pitt press series (University press, 1903).
69.
Raz, J. The authority of lawEssays on law and morality. (Oxford University Press, 1979). doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198253457.001.0001.
70.
Walzer, M. Obligations: essays on disobedience, war, and citizenship. (Harvard University Press, 1970).
71.
Sabl, A. Looking Forward to Justice: Rawlsian Civil Disobedience and its Non-Rawlsian Lessons. Journal of Political Philosophy 9, 331–349 (2001).
72.
David Enoch. Some Arguments against Conscientious Objection and Civil Disobedience Refuted. Israel Law Review 36, 227–253 (2002).
73.
BUCHANAN, A. Theories of Secession. Philosophy Public Affairs 26, 31–61 (1997).
74.
Alan Patten. Democratic Secession from a Multinational State*. Ethics 112, 558–586 (2002).
75.
Daniel Philpott. In Defense of Self-Determination. Ethics 105, 352–385 (1995).
76.
National Self-Determination and Secession. (Oxford University Press, 1998). doi:10.1093/0198293844.001.0001.
77.
David Miller. Secession and the Principle of Nationality. in National Self-Determination and Secession (ed. Moore, M.) (Oxford University Press, 1998). doi:10.1093/0198293844.001.0001.
78.
National Self-Determination and Secession. (Oxford University Press, 1998). doi:10.1093/0198293844.001.0001.
79.
Margaret Moore. The Ethics of Secession and a Normative Theory of Nationalism. Canadian Journal of Law and Jurisprudence 13, 225–250.
80.
David Gauthier. Breaking up: An Essay on Secession. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 24, 357–371 (1994).
81.
Brilmayer, Lea. Secession and Self-Determination: A Territorial Interpretation. Yale Journal of International Law 16, 177–202 (1991).
82.
Christopher H. Wellman. A Defense of Secession and Political Self-Determination. Philosophy & Public Affairs 24, 142–171 (1995).
83.
Wellman, C. H. A theory of secession: the case for political self-determination. (Cambridge University Press, 2005).
84.
Buchanan, A. E. Secession: the morality of political divorce from Fort Sumter to Lithuania and Quebec. (Westview Press, 1991).
85.
Buchanan, A. Justice, Legitimacy, and Self-Determination. (Oxford University Press, 2003). doi:10.1093/0198295359.001.0001.
86.
Macedo, S. & Buchanan, A. E. Secession and self-determination. vol. Nomos (New York University Press, 2003).
87.
W. B. Gallie. Essentially Contested Concepts. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 56, 167–198 (1956).
88.
LIST, C. The Logical Space of Democracy. Philosophy & Public Affairs 39, 262–297 (2011).
89.
Gutmann, A. Democracy. in A Companion to Contemporary Political Philosophy (eds. Goodin, R. E., Pettit, P. & Pogge, T.) (Wiley, 2017). doi:10.1002/9781405177245.
90.
Sen, A. K. Democracy as a Universal Value. Journal of Democracy 10, 3–17 (1999).
91.
Weale, A. Democracy. vol. Issues in political theory (Palgrave, 1999).
92.
Estlund, D. M. Democracy. vol. Blackwell readings in philosophy (Blackwell Publishers, 2001).
93.
Democracy (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy).
94.
Brian Barry. Is Democracy Special? in Democracy and power: essays in political theory I (Clarendon Press, 1991).
95.
Schumpeter, J. A. Capitalism, socialism, and democracy. (G. Allen & Unwin Ltd, 1943).
96.
Quinton, A. Political philosophy. vol. Oxford readings in philosophy (Oxford University Press, 1967).
97.
Dahl, R. A. Democracy and its critics. (Yale University Press, 1989).
98.
Dworkin, R. Justice for hedgehogs. (Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, 2011).
99.
Christiano, T. The rule of the many: fundamental issues in democratic theory. vol. Focus (Southern Regional Education Board) (Westview Press, 1996).
100.
Gordon Graham. What is Special About Democracy? Mind 92, 94–102 (1983).
101.
Dahl, R. A. Democracy and its critics. (Yale University Press, 1989).
102.
Richard Arneson. Democracy is not Intrinsically Just. in Justice and democracy: essays for Brian Barry (Cambridge University Press, 2004).
103.
Parijs, P. Justice and Democracy: Are they Incompatible?*. Journal of Political Philosophy 4, 101–117 (1996).
104.
Griffin, C. G. Democracy as a Non-Instrumentally Just Procedure. Journal of Political Philosophy 11, 111–121 (2003).
105.
Arneson, R. J. Defending the Purely Instrumental Account of Democratic Legitimacy. Journal of Political Philosophy 11, 122–132 (2003).
106.
Christiano, T. The Authority of Democracy*. Journal of Political Philosophy 12, 266–290 (2004).
107.
Joshua Cohen. Deliberation and Democratic Legitimacy. in The Good polity: normative analysis of the state (Basil Blackwell, 1989).
108.
Review by: Joshua Cohen. Reflections on Rousseau: Autonomy and Democracy. Philosophy & Public Affairs 15, 275–297 (1986).
109.
Valentini, L. Justice, Disagreement and Democracy. British Journal of Political Science 43, 177–199 (2013).
110.
Ross, M. Is Democracy Good for the Poor? American Journal of Political Science 50, 860–874 (2006).
111.
Estlund, D. M. Democratic authority: a philosophical framework. (Princeton University Press, 2008).
112.
Walzer, M. Spheres of justice: a defense of pluralism and equality. (Basic Books, 1983).
113.
Young, I. M. Inclusion and Democracy. (Oxford University Press, 2002). doi:10.1093/0198297556.001.0001.
114.
Beitz, C. R. Political equality: an essay in democratic theory. (Princeton University Press, 1989).
115.
Jeremy Waldron. The Wisdom of the Multitude: Some Reflections on Book 3, Chapter 11 of Aristotle’s Politics. Political Theory 23, 563–584 (1995).
116.
Jeremy Waldron. The Core of the Case against Judicial Review. The Yale Law Journal 115, 1346–1406 (2006).
117.
Brettschneider, C. Balancing Procedures and Outcomes Within Democratic Theory: Core Values and Judicial Review. Political Studies 53, 423–441 (2005).
118.
Allen Buchanan. Political Legitimacy and Democracy*. Ethics 112, 689–719 (2002).
119.
Anne Phillips. Democracy and Difference: Some Problems for Feminist Theory. in The rights of minority cultures (Oxford University Press, 1997).
120.
Risse, M. Arguing for Majority Rule*. Journal of Political Philosophy 12, 41–64 (2004).
121.
Christiano, T. The Constitution of Equality. (Oxford University Press, 2008). doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198297475.001.0001.
122.
Democracy, Political Equality, and Majority Rule*. Ethics 121, 148–177 (2010).
123.
Harrison, R. Democracy. (Routledge, 2002). doi:10.4324/9780203005545.
124.
Weale, A. Democracy. vol. Issues in political theory (Palgrave, 1999).
125.
Steven Macedo. Against Majoritarianism: Democratic Values and Institutional Design. Boston University Law Review 90, 1029–1042.
126.
Waldron, J. Law and Disagreement. (Oxford University Press, 1999). doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198262138.001.0001.
127.
Noveck, Scott M. Is Judicial Review Compatible with Democracy? Cardozo Public Law, Policy, and Ethics Journal 6, 401–430 (2007).
128.
Dworkin, R. Law’s empire. vol. Fontana master guides (Fontana, 1986).
129.
Christiano, T. The Authority of Democracy*. Journal of Political Philosophy 12, 266–290 (2004).
130.
LIST, C. & KOENIG-ARCHIBUGI, M. Can There Be a Global Demos? An Agency-Based Approach. Philosophy & Public Affairs 38, 76–110 (2010).
131.
Miller, D. Democracy’s Domain. Philosophy & Public Affairs 37, 201–228 (2009).
132.
Goodin, R. E. Global democracy: in the beginning. International Theory 2, 175–209 (2010).
133.
Koenig-Archibugi, M. Is global democracy possible? European Journal of International Relations 17, 519–542 (2011).
134.
David Miller. Against Global Democracy. in After the nation?: critical reflections on nationalism and post-nationalism vol. International political theory series (Palgrave Macmillan, 2010).
135.
Näsström, S. The Challenge of the All-Affected Principle. Political Studies 59, 116–134 (2011).
136.
GOODIN, R. E. Enfranchising All Affected Interests, and Its Alternatives. Philosophy & Public Affairs 35, 40–68 (2007).
137.
Macdonald, T. Global Stakeholder Democracy. (Oxford University Press, 2008). doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199235001.001.0001.
138.
Thompson, D. F. Democratic Theory and Global Society. Journal of Political Philosophy 7, 111–125 (1999).
139.
Gould, C. C. Globalizing democracy and human rights. (Cambridge University Press, 2004).
140.
David Held. Democracy and the International System. in Cosmopolitan democracy: an agenda for a new world order (Polity Press, 1995).
141.
Robert Dahl. Can International Organisations be Democratic? in Democracy’s edges vol. Contemporary political theory (Cambridge University Press, 1999).
142.
Cabrera, Luis. The Inconveniences of Transnational Democracy. Ethics and International Affairs 21, 219–238 (1AD).
143.
Ronald Dworkin. The Original Position. The University of Chicago Law Review 40, 500–533 (1973).
144.
Daniel Star & Candice Delmas. Three Conceptions of Practical Authority. Jurisprudence 21, 143–160.
145.
May, T. On Raz and the Obligation to Obey the Law. Law and Philosophy 16, 19–36.
146.
Dagger, R. Membership, Fair Play, and Political Obligation. Political Studies 48, 104–117 (2000).
147.
A. John Simmons. Fair Play and Political Obligation: Twenty Years Later. in Justification and Legitimacy (Cambridge University Press, 2000). doi:10.1017/CBO9780511625152.
148.
Dworkin, R. Civil disobedience and nuclear protest. in A matter of principle (Clarendon Press, 1986).
149.
Smith, W. Democracy, Deliberation and Disobedience. Res Publica 10, 353–377 (2004).
150.
JOHN MORREALL. The Justifiability of Violent Civil Disobedience. Canadian Journal of Philosophy 6, 35–47 (2013).
151.
Martin L. King. Letter from Birmingham Jail.
152.
Markovitz, D. ‘Democratic Disobedience’. Yale Law Journal 114, (2005).
153.
W. B. Gallie. Essentially Contested Concepts. Proceedings of the Aristotelian Society 56, 167–198 (1956).