Carol C. Gould

Last updated

Carol C. Gould
Education University of Chicago (BA), Yale University (M.Phil, PhD)
Era 20th-/21st-century philosophy
Region Western philosophy
School Critical theory, feminist philosophy, analytical Marxism
Main interests
Democratic theory, human rights, feminism, social ontology
Notable ideas
Equal positive freedom, Concrete Universality, Transnational Solidarity

Carol C. Gould is an American philosopher and feminist theorist. Since 2009, she has taught at City University of New York, where she is currently Distinguished Professor of Philosophy at Hunter College, and in the Doctoral Programs of Philosophy and Political Science at the CUNY Graduate Center, [1] where she is Director of the Center for Global Ethics and Politics [2] at the Ralph Bunche Institute. [3] Gould is also editor-in-chief of the Journal of Social Philosophy . Her 2004 book Globalizing Democracy and Human Rights received the 2009 David Easton Award which is given by the American Political Science Association "for a book that broadens the horizons of contemporary political science." [4] Her 2014 book Interactive Democracy: The Social Roots of Global Justice received the 2015 Joseph B. Gittler Award from the American Philosophical Association for "an outstanding scholarly contribution in the field of the philosophy of one or more of the social sciences." [5]

Contents

Biography

Carol Gould grew up in New York City, on Manhattan’s Upper West Side. Her mother, Evelyn Gould, emigrated from Ukraine and became a NYC high school teacher for homebound students. Her father, Morris Minkus, was descended from the Seer of Lublin, and published several Yiddish plays in Poland before emigrating to the US and becoming a stamp dealer. Carol Gould attended the Ramaz School, then the University of Chicago, where she studied philosophy and psychology, graduating early with a degree in “The Analysis of Ideas and the Study of Methods." She studied with Hannah Arendt, Richard McKeon, and other illustrious professors, and took part in early anti-war demonstrations there, which helped turn her interest toward political philosophy. Gould subsequently received her MPhil and PhD degrees in philosophy from Yale University. She was active in the social movements of the day, including in early feminist “consciousness-raising” groups.

Gould has taught philosophy and political science at a number of colleges and universities, including the State University of New York at New Paltz, Lehman College of the City University of New York, Swarthmore College, the University of Pittsburgh, Stevens Institute of Technology (where she was Principal Investigator on a National Science Foundation grant on the ethical and social implications of computer networking), Columbia University’s School of International and Public Affairs, Temple University, George Mason University, (where she founded the Center for Global Ethics), and finally at Hunter College and the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Gould was awarded a Rockefeller Foundation Humanities Fellowship, two fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, and two Fulbright fellowships: a Senior Scholar Award to Paris, France, and the Fulbright Distinguished Chair (the Florence Chair) at the European University Institute. She also held residencies at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey. She has been a Senior Scholar at the Center for Humans and Nature and was a Distinguished Visiting Professor of the Indian Philosophical Society. Gould has been Editor of the Journal of Social Philosophy since 2004.


Philosophical Work

Gould's works cover political philosophy (e.g. democratic theory), the philosophy of human rights, social theory, and feminist philosophy. [6]

With Marx Wartofsky, Gould edited a collection entitled Women and Philosophy: Towards a Theory of Liberation (G. P. Putnam’s Press, 1976, reprinted from a special issue of The Philosophical Forum, 1973–74), which is credited with helping to popularize feminism in academic philosophy. [7] In her lead article entitled “The Woman Question: Philosophy of Liberation and the Liberation of Philosophy,” Gould argued against traditional “abstract universalist” or essentialist perspectives which focus on human nature as such and proposed an alternative socially-grounded approach that incorporates social and historically constructed differences, which she called “concrete universality.” [8]

Gould's book Marx's Social Ontology (MIT Press, 1978) was an early formulation of the project of social ontology, a philosophical subfield which has since grown substantially. Drawing on an interpretation of Karl Marx's middle work Grundrisse, Gould developed a distinctive approach to understanding the basic entities of social life, which she called "individuals-in-relations," replacing the "atomistic individualism" prevalent in liberal political thought. [9] She argued that Marxian philosophy combined Aristotelian elements with Hegelian ones, and that the Grundrisse provides an essential connection between his early theories of alienation and the later political economy, in a book which amounts to "a philosophical reconstruction of Marx's entire system." [10]

In a second collection on feminist philosophy, Beyond Domination: New Perspectives on Women and Philosophy (1984), Gould argued for what she called “political androgyny,” in which a polity could usefully combine historically “male” and “female” characteristics, rather than defining the public sphere in traditional masculinist terms that exclude care and supportiveness, traits historically identified with women. Gould proposed a similar openness to self-definition in personal life to incorporate the possibility of androgyny and other diverse expressions of gender and sexuality. Gould, along with other thinkers such as Claudia Card, Marilyn Friedman, and Martha Nussbaum, link the ideal of androgynous society to other social and political desiderata such as democratic equality and socialist justice. [11]

In Rethinking Democracy: Freedom and Social Cooperation in Politics, Economy, and Society (1988), Gould argued for a norm of positive freedom as an important supplement to traditional negative liberty (as freedom from external interference, especially from the state), in a theory “incorporating the strengths and rejecting the basic deficiencies in liberal (negative) conceptions of freedom, while avoiding the authoritarian impulses that Berlin and others have argued necessarily follow in the wake of positive theories of freedom.” [12] For Gould, positive freedom presupposes free choice but goes beyond it to the self-development of an individual’s capacities and projects over time, which requires access to material, social, and economic conditions. These include not only the “negative” civil liberties and political rights, but also freedom from oppression and domination, as well as enabling or “positive” economic and social rights. Gould argued that individuals as agents have equal rights of access to these conditions--“equal positive freedom”--which she presented as an alternative principle of justice to the then dominant views of Rawls and Nozick. The free expression of individual agency in turn requires opportunities to take part in decision making about “common activities” and to co-determine with others the direction of those collective activities, that is, a right to democratic participation. Since these activities are broader than just politics, Gould holds that democracy should be extended to economic institutions, in forms of workplace democracy or self-managing firms or enterprises. [13] Gould's democratic theory based on equal positive freedom thus aims to show the compatibility of the apparently conflicting values of individual freedom on the one hand and social cooperation and equality on the other. [14]

Writing in the Times Literary Supplement , the political philosopher Maurice Cranston commented that "Like Tocqueville, who attributed the success of democracy in America in part to the character of the Americans—and especially American women—Dr Gould maintains that the citizens of a democratic State must have “democratic personalities" including what can only be described as democratic virtues." These include, for her, a "disposition to reciprocity" and "active citizenship in association with others." Despite expressing reservations about the practicability of her proposed extension of democracy to social and economic life, Cranston concludes that "no reader can fail to be impressed with the intellectual rigour of her presentation and the charm of her style." [15]

Gould's edited collection The Information Web (1989) was one of the first to take up the ethical and social implications of the newly emerging Internet, growing out of a collaborative NSF research grant on that theme that she led at Stevens Institute of Technology. Her article in that book, entitled "Network Ethics: Access, Consent, and The Informed Community,” proposed a principle of maximally free and open access to information, consistent with the right to privacy, as indicated by informed consent. [16] More recently, she elaborated her approach in her 2014 book Interactive Democracy in a discussion of what she called “emancipatory networking" and in an article "How Democracy can Inform Consent: Cases of the Internet and Bioethics.” [17]

In Social Justice and the Limitation of Democracy, she elaborated her understanding of democratic political structures as grounded in an ideal of liberty understood as the equal right to self-development [18] and considered when democratic decisions could be constrained by norms of justice. Her book Globalizing Democracy and Human Rights (Cambridge University Press, 2004) took up this and other hard questions in democratic theory, including how democracy could extend beyond nation-states to transnational and even global contexts. She articulated the fundamental conditions for positive freedom in terms of human rights, interpreting these as not only legal rights but also as social and moral demands that people have on each other, which require the creation of institutions to meet basic material needs and needs for social recognition, along with relational needs for care, nurturance, and education. At base remains her “individuals-in-relations” ontology, which sees individuals as partly constituted by their relations with others, but where they have the ability to choose and change these relations, either individually or together with others. [19] Gould proposed seeing universalist norms like human rights as “intersociative," in which they remain open to diverse cultural interpretations, while retaining their critical edge, [20] appealing to a conception of concrete universality, which provides “a constructivist approach that is neither an endorsement of the local practice nor an imposition of an alien value.” [21] [22] Yet, in seeking intercultural deliberation and dialogue, the question of "Who speaks for a culture?" remains important, since representations of a given culture by privileged individuals may often prioritize their own narrow interests at the expense of those within that culture who are less privileged. [23] Gould also argued that care, empathy, and reciprocity in social relationships are important for strengthening democracy, both within nation-states and as it extends through diverse social and cultural contexts to a transnational or even global level. [24] Confronting the issue of the "democratic deficit" in globalization, she proposed a requirement for "democratic input" (although not fully equal rights of participation) from people whose human rights are affected by the decisions of powerful actors, whether nation-states, corporations, or global institutions. [25] She also described how new forms of solidarity can help to achieve justice and can address the persistence of exploitation and the concentration of wealth in processes economic globalization. [26]

Gould's analysis of transnational solidarity (2007) elaborated her networking conception of solidarity, modeled on social movements and civil society organizations working to eliminate oppression or suffering, especially across borders. In contrast to unitary models of solidarity within small groups or nation-states, this looser form involves actions between groups oriented to mutual aid or support and requires deference to those the groups are trying to assist. [27]

In her fourth book, Interactive Democracy: The Social Roots of Global Justice (Cambridge University Press, 2014), Gould attempted to integrate the norms of democracy, justice, freedom, care, and solidarity, arguing that the tendency of political philosophy to treat them separately unnecessarily limits the insights that can be gleaned by exploring their interactions. She developed her theory of human rights and its application to achieving economic justice in global contexts, and argued for a human right to democracy, understood as having a wide scope. The book explained how positive freedom goes beyond standard views of autonomy in incorporating a biographical dimension of growth or development over time. Other themes included the role of social movements in achieving social and economic justice, the possibilities of empathy and solidarity across borders, the problem of gender inequalities in diverse cultures, new ways of carrying out democratic deliberation online, and ways of structuring the institutions of global governance.

Gould’s conception of human rights as involving not only legal but also social and moral claims coheres with feminist approaches that extend rights to the private sphere and the ways they depend on practices of care and solidarity. [28] Real democracy, for Gould, "reflects a conception of persons as social, networked, deliberative, engaged, and self-transformative. The political structures and modes of interaction within which we live must be equally deliberative and dynamic—they too must be interactive. And it is this conception of democracy as a multilayered, varied, dynamic, networked practice of political, economic, and social activity among diverse people at the local, national, transnational, and global levels that sets Interactive Democracy apart from other contributions to democratic theory and social philosophy." [29] According to the Italian international relations theorist Daniele Archibugi, the book poses a challenge to contemporary political theory and practice, which holds that democracy applies to nation-states, rather than also to smaller communities (e.g., firms, or even families) or to institutions beyond the state such as regions or the UN. Globalization has made many boundaries irrelevant, and generated interdependences in economies, migration, climate change and technologies. Since many active human communities no longer coincide with states, and many issues escape control of particular governments, Gould argues for a necessary expansion of the scope of democracy. [30] At the same time, the understanding of democracy as a norm would also have to be enriched. The political theorist Sanford Schram writes that for Gould "Democracy is embedded in social relations that work to realize social justice and vice versa. The art of separating politics from the rest of society needs to be questioned at a fundamental level and on a global scale." [31]

In recent years, Gould has written articles on solidarity in healthcare, [32] on labor rights as human rights, [33] on democratic self-management in firms, [34] and on the meaning of structural injustice and its implications for social and political responsibility. [35] In addition to her substantive contributions, she is known for her use of a dialectical methodology in philosophy, building upon and synthesizing a wide variety of approaches, from liberal thought to critical social theory, as well as for bringing feminist concepts including care, empathy, and women's human rights into the realm of mainstream political philosophy and international ethics. [36]

Gould has been active in the professions of philosophy and political science. She was President of the American Section of the International Society for Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy and of the American Society for Value Inquiry, as well as of the Human Rights Section of the American Political Science Association. In the American Philosophical Association, she served as Chair of the Committee on Lectures, Publications, and Research, a Member-at-Large of its Board of Officers, and a member of its Committees on the Status of Women, the Status and Future of the Profession, International Cooperation, and the Defense of the Professional Rights of Philosophers. She also was Chair of the Association of Philosophy Journal Editors.

Gould's fellowships and grants include a Rockefeller Foundation Humanities Fellowship (1978–79), a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship for College Teachers (1993), a Fulbright Senior Scholar Award to France (1993–94), a Fulbright Distinguished Chair Professorship in Florence (2000), a Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars Fellowship (2001), and Membership at the Institute for Advanced Study (2015–16). She also was Principal Investigator on an NSF Grant on Ethics and Values in Science and Technology (1985–87).

Books

Author

Editor

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Egalitarianism</span> Trend of thought that favors equality for all people

Egalitarianism, or equalitarianism, is a school of thought within political philosophy that builds on the concept of social equality, prioritizing it for all people. Egalitarian doctrines are generally characterized by the idea that all humans are equal in fundamental worth or moral status. As such, all citizens of a state should be accorded equal rights and treatment under the law. Egalitarian doctrines have supported many modern social movements, including the Enlightenment, feminism, civil rights, and international human rights.

Political freedom is a central concept in history and political thought and one of the most important features of democratic societies. Political freedom was described as freedom from oppression or coercion, the absence of disabling conditions for an individual and the fulfillment of enabling conditions, or the absence of life conditions of compulsion, e.g. economic compulsion, in a society. Although political freedom is often interpreted negatively as the freedom from unreasonable external constraints on action, it can also refer to the positive exercise of rights, capacities and possibilities for action and the exercise of social or group rights. The concept can also include freedom from internal constraints on political action or speech. The concept of political freedom is closely connected with the concepts of civil liberties and human rights, which in democratic societies are usually afforded legal protection from the state.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Political philosophy</span> Sub-discipline of philosophy and political science

Political philosophy or political theory is the philosophical study of government, addressing questions about the nature, scope, and legitimacy of public agents and institutions and the relationships between them. Its topics include politics, liberty, justice, property, rights, law, and the enforcement of laws by authority: what they are, if they are needed, what makes a government legitimate, what rights and freedoms it should protect, what form it should take, what the law is, and what duties citizens owe to a legitimate government, if any, and when it may be legitimately overthrown, if ever.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Richard Rorty</span> American philosopher

Richard McKay Rorty was an American philosopher. Educated at the University of Chicago and Yale University, he had strong interests and training in both the history of philosophy and in contemporary analytic philosophy. Rorty's academic career included appointments as the Stuart Professor of Philosophy at Princeton University, Kenan Professor of Humanities at the University of Virginia, and Professor of Comparative literature at Stanford University. Among his most influential books are Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature (1979), Consequences of Pragmatism (1982), and Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity (1989).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Charles Taylor (philosopher)</span> Canadian philosopher (born 1931)

Charles Margrave Taylor is a Canadian philosopher from Montreal, Quebec, and professor emeritus at McGill University best known for his contributions to political philosophy, the philosophy of social science, the history of philosophy, and intellectual history. His work has earned him the Kyoto Prize, the Templeton Prize, the Berggruen Prize for Philosophy, and the John W. Kluge Prize.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Social philosophy</span> Branch of philosophy

Social philosophy examines questions about the foundations of social institutions, social behavior, and interpretations of society in terms of ethical values rather than empirical relations. Social philosophers emphasize understanding the social contexts for political, legal, moral and cultural questions, and the development of novel theoretical frameworks, from social ontology to care ethics to cosmopolitan theories of democracy, natural law, human rights, gender equity and global justice.

Cosmopolitanism is the idea that all human beings are members of a single community. Its adherents are known as cosmopolitan or cosmopolite. Cosmopolitanism is both prescriptive and aspirational, believing humans can and should be "world citizens" in a "universal community". The idea encompasses different dimensions and avenues of community, such as promoting universal moral standards, establishing global political structures, or developing a platform for mutual cultural expression and tolerance.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Philosophy and economics</span> Branch of philosophy

Philosophy and economics studies topics such as public economics, behavioural economics, rationality, justice, history of economic thought, rational choice, the appraisal of economic outcomes, institutions and processes, the status of highly idealized economic models, the ontology of economic phenomena and the possibilities of acquiring knowledge of them.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Axel Honneth</span> German philosopher

Axel Honneth is a German philosopher who is the Professor for Social Philosophy at Goethe University Frankfurt and the Jack B. Weinstein Professor of the Humanities in the department of philosophy at Columbia University. He was also director of the Institut für Sozialforschung in Frankfurt am Main, Germany between 2001 and 2018.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nancy Fraser</span> American philosopher (born 1947)

Nancy Fraser is an American philosopher, critical theorist, feminist, and the Henry A. and Louise Loeb Professor of Political and Social Science and professor of philosophy at The New School in New York City. Widely known for her critique of identity politics and her philosophical work on the concept of justice, Fraser is also a staunch critic of contemporary liberal feminism and its abandonment of social justice issues. Fraser holds honorary doctoral degrees from four universities in three countries, and won the 2010 Alfred Schutz Prize in Social Philosophy from the American Philosophical Association. She was President of the American Philosophical Association Eastern Division for the 2017–2018 term.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Global justice</span> Issue in political philosophy

Global justice is an issue in political philosophy arising from the concern about unfairness. It is sometimes understood as a form of internationalism.

Seyla Benhabib is a Turkish-born American philosopher. Benhabib is a senior research scholar and adjunct professor of law at Columbia Law School. She is also an affiliate faculty member in the Columbia University Department of Philosophy and a senior fellow at the Columbia Center for Contemporary Critical Thought. She was a scholar in residence at the Law School from 2018 to 2019 and was also the James S. Carpentier Visiting Professor of Law in spring 2019. She was the Eugene Mayer Professor of Political Science and Philosophy at Yale University from 2001 to 2020. She was director of the program in Ethics, Politics, and Economics from 2002 to 2008. Benhabib is well known for her work in political philosophy, which draws on critical theory and feminist political theory. She has written extensively on the philosophers Hannah Arendt and Jürgen Habermas, as well as on the topic of human migration. She is the author of numerous books, and has received several prestigious awards and lectureships in recognition of her work.

The ethics of care is a normative ethical theory that holds that moral action centers on interpersonal relationships and care or benevolence as a virtue. EoC is one of a cluster of normative ethical theories that were developed by some feminists and environmentalists since the 1980s. While consequentialist and deontological ethical theories emphasize generalizable standards and impartiality, ethics of care emphasize the importance of response to the individual. The distinction between the general and the individual is reflected in their different moral questions: "what is just?" versus "how to respond?". Carol Gilligan, who is considered the originator of the ethics of care, criticized the application of generalized standards as "morally problematic, since it breeds moral blindness or indifference".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Iris Marion Young</span> American philosopher (1949–2006)

Iris Marion Young was an American political theorist and socialist feminist who focused on the nature of justice and social difference. She served as Professor of Political Science at the University of Chicago and was affiliated with the Center for Gender Studies and the Human Rights program there. Her research covered contemporary political theory, feminist social theory, and normative analysis of public policy. She believed in the importance of political activism and encouraged her students to involve themselves in their communities.

Articles in social and political philosophy include:

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Alasdair Cochrane</span> British political theorist and ethicist

Alasdair Cochrane is a British political theorist and ethicist who is currently Professor of Political Theory in the Department of Politics and International Relations at the University of Sheffield. He is known for his work on animal rights from the perspective of political theory, which is the subject of his two books: An Introduction to Animals and Political Theory and Animal Rights Without Liberation. His third book, Sentientist Politics, was published by Oxford University Press in 2018. He is a founding member of the Centre for Animals and Social Justice, a UK-based think tank focused on furthering the social and political status of nonhuman animals. He joined the Department at Sheffield in 2012, having previously been a faculty member at the Centre for the Study of Human Rights, London School of Economics. Cochrane is a Sentientist. Sentientism is a naturalistic worldview that grants moral consideration to all sentient beings.

Sally J. Scholz is an American Professor of Philosophy at Villanova University and former editor of Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy. Her research focuses on social philosophy, political philosophy, and feminist theory. Her early work involves issues of violence against women, oppression and peacemaking, and then progresses to ethics of advocacy and violence against women in conflict settings, including war rape and just war theory. Her recent research involves these issues in addition to solidarity. She has published four single-author books and edited three academic journals, among many other publications.

Cristina Lafont is Harold H. and Virginia Anderson Professor of Philosophy at Northwestern University.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rahel Jaeggi</span> German philosopher (born 1966)

Rahel Jaeggi is a professor of practical philosophy and social philosophy at the Humboldt University of Berlin. Her research areas are in social philosophy, political philosophy, ethics, philosophical anthropology, social ontology, and critical theory. Since February 2018 she has been the head of the Berlin campus of the newly founded International Center for Humanities and Social Change.

<i>Sentientist Politics</i> 2018 book by Alasdair Cochrane

Sentientist Politics: A Theory of Global Inter-Species Justice is a 2018 book by the English political theorist Alasdair Cochrane, published by Oxford University Press. In the book, Cochrane outlines and defends his political theory of "sentientist cosmopolitan democracy". The approach is sentientist in that it recognises all sentient animals as bearers of rights; cosmopolitan in that it extends cosmopolitan political theory to include animals, rejecting the importance of state borders and endorsing impartiality; and democratic in that it aims to include animals in systems of representative and cosmopolitan democracy. It was the first book to extend cosmopolitan theory to animals, and was a contribution to the "political turn" in animal ethics – animal ethics informed by political philosophy.

References

  1. "Carol Gould". CUNY Graduate Center. Retrieved June 23, 2016.
  2. "About CGEP". Center for Global Ethics and Politics. Retrieved March 11, 2022.
  3. "Home". Ralph Bunche Institute. Retrieved March 11, 2022.
  4. "Foundations of Political Thought Section Award Recipients". American Political Science Association . Retrieved June 23, 2016.
  5. "Gittler Award Recipients". American Philosophical Association . Retrieved March 11, 2022.
  6. "Carol Gould – Political Science | The Graduate Center, CUNY". politicalscience.commons.gc.cuny.edu. Retrieved November 4, 2018.
  7. Jackson, D.M. (2011). "Gould, Carol". In Chatterjee, D.K. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Global Justice. Dordrecht: Springer. p. 456. doi:10.1007/978-1-4020-9160-5_457.
  8. Gould, C.C. (1973–1974). "The Woman Question: Philosophy of Liberation and the Liberation of Philosophy". Philosophical Forum. V (1–2): 5–44.
  9. Gould, Carol C (1978). Marx's Social Ontology: Individuality and Community in Marx's Theory of Social Reality. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press.
  10. Ellard, George (1979). "Review of Marx's Social Ontology". American Political Science Review. 73 (3): 853–854. doi:10.2307/1955417. JSTOR   1955417.
  11. Sterba, James (2001). Social and Political Philosophy: Contemporary Perspectives. London: Routledge. p. 232. ISBN   0415217954.
  12. Preston, Larry M. (1989). "Review of Rethinking Democracy". The American Political Science Review. 83 (2): 607–608. doi:10.2307/1962409. JSTOR   1962409.
  13. Gould, Carol C. (1988). Rethinking Democracy: Freedom and Social Cooperation in Politics, Economy, and Society. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 31–90, 247–261.
  14. Lemos, Ramon M. (1993). "Review of Rethinking Democracy: Freedom and Social Cooperation in Politics, Economy, and Society, by Carol C. Gould". Noûs. 27 (4): 525–527. doi:10.2307/2215794. JSTOR   2215794.
  15. Cranston, Maurice (1989). "Thinking Anew". The Times Literary Supplement (4477): 52.
  16. Gould, Carol C. (1989). The Information Web: Ethical and Social Implications of Computer Networking. Westview Press/Routledge.
  17. Gould, Carol C. (2019). "How Democracy Can Inform Consent: Cases of the Internet and Bioethics". Journal of Applied Philosophy. 36 (2): 173–191. doi:10.1111/japp.12360. S2CID   151187504.
  18. Sterba, James; Machan, Tibor; Jaggar, Alison; Galston, William; Gould, Carol; Fisk, Milton; Solomon, Robert (1995). Morality and Social Justice: Point/counterpoint . Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. pp.  216. ISBN   0847679772.
  19. Robinson, Fiona (2007). "Review of Globalizing Democracy and Human Rights". Ethics & International Affairs. 20 (2): 263–265. doi:10.1111/j.1747-7093.2007.00075.x. S2CID   143187931.
  20. Jackson, D.M. (2011). "Gould, Carol". In Chatterjee, D.K. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Global Justice. Dordrecht: Springer. pp. 455–457. doi:10.1007/978-1-4020-9160-5_457.
  21. Globalizing Democracy and Human Rights. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 42–43.
  22. See discussion in Chatterjee, Deen K. (2007). "Human Rights and Democratic Legitimacy: Navigating the Challenges in a Pluralistic World". Good Society Journal. 16 (2): 41–44. doi: 10.5325/goodsociety.16.2.0041 . S2CID   246628055.
  23. Jackson, D.M. (2011). "Gould, Carol". In Chatterjee, D.K. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Global Justice. Dordrecht: Springer. p. 456. doi:10.1007/978-1-4020-9160-5_457.
  24. Watkins, Robert E. (2006). "Negotiating Rights and Difference: Liberalism, Cosmopolitanism, and Democracy". Political Theory (34): 628. doi:10.1177/0090591706288023. S2CID   142985238.
  25. Gould, Carol C. (2004). Globalizing Democracy and Human Rights. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 201–216.
  26. Bellon, Christina M. (2007). "Review of Globalizing Democracy and Human Rights". Hypatia. 22 (4): 206–209.
  27. Gould, Carol C. (2007). "Transnational Solidarities". Journal of Social Philosophy. 38 (1): 146–162. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9833.2007.00371.x.
  28. Robinson, Fiona (2016). "Imagining 'The Global': Gender, Justice, and Philosophy". Hypatia. 31 (2): 466–471. doi:10.1111/hypa.12230. S2CID   147419620.
  29. Buckley, Michael (2016). "Interactive Democracy: The Social Roots of Global Justice". Philosophical Quarterly. 66 (264): 635–638. doi:10.1093/pq/pqv091.
  30. Archibugi, Daniele (2017). "Review of Interactive Democracy: The Social Roots of Global Justice". Perspectives on Politics. 15 (1): 214–215. doi:10.1017/S1537592716004631. S2CID   151490983.
  31. Schram, Sanford F. (2016). "The Global Relations of Democracy: Social Justice as Embedded". Democratic Theory. 3 (2): 67–72. doi:10.3167/dt.2016.030205.
  32. Gould, Carol C. (2018). "Solidarity and the Problem of Structural Injustice in Healthcare". Bioethics. 32 (9): 541–552. doi:10.1111/bioe.12474. PMID   30044895. S2CID   51720810.
  33. Gould, Carol C. (2020). "Labor Rights as Human Rights: Issues of Foundation and Application". In Monshipouri, Mahmoud (ed.). Why Human Rights Still Matter in Contemporary World Affairs. London: Routledge. pp. 177–194.
  34. Gould, Carol C. (2019). "Protecting Democracy by Extending It: Democratic Management Reconsidered". Journal of Social Philosophy. 50 (4): 513–535. doi:10.1111/josp.12326. S2CID   212844266.
  35. Gould, Carol C. (2020). "Motivating Solidarity with Distant Others: Empathic Politics, Responsibility, and the Problem of Global Justice". In Brooks, Thom (ed.). Oxford Handbook of Global Justice. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 122–138. doi:10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198714354.013.6.
  36. Robinson, Fiona (2007). "Review of Globalizing Democracy and Human Rights". Ethics & International Affairs. 20 (2): 264.Tronto, Joan (2007). "Human Rights, Democracy and Care". Good Society Journal. 16 (2): 38–40. doi: 10.5325/goodsociety.16.2.0038 . S2CID   246620595.
  37. "Books – Carol C. Gould". Archived from the original on May 20, 2016. Retrieved June 23, 2016.