Freeman Spogli Institute for International Studies
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Joshua Cohen, MA, PhD   Download vCard

Director of the Program on Global Justice at FSI Stanford and Professor of Political Science, Philosophy, and Law

Program on Global Justice
Encina Hall West, Room 404
Stanford University
Stanford, CA 94305

jcohen57@stanford.edu
(650) 723-0256 (voice)


Research Interests
issues of global justice, including the foundations of human rights, distributive fairness, and supra-national democratic governance


+PDF+ Joshua Cohen's Curriculum Vitae (172.1KB, modified October 2007)

Joshua Cohen is a professor of law, political science, and philosophy at Stanford University, and director of the Program on Global Justice at FSI. He is a political theorist, trained in philosophy, with a special interest in issues that lie at the intersection of democratic norms and institutions.

Cohen has written extensively on issues of democratic theory, particularly on the theory of deliberative democracy and the implications of that idea for issues of personal liberty, freedom of expression, electoral finance, and new forms of associative and direct-democratic participation. Cohen's many publications on political philosophy include several written with University of Michigan law professor Joel Rogers: On Democracy (1983); Inequity and Intervention: The Federal Budget and Central America (1986); Rules of the Game (1986); and Associations and Democracy (1995). His collected papers are forthcoming from Harvard University Press, and A Free Community of Equals: Rousseau on Democracy is forthcoming from Oxford University Press. He is editor of Boston Review, a bi-monthly magazine of political, cultural, and literary ideas; and has edited 18 books that grew out of forums that initially appeared in Boston Review.

Professor Cohen comes to Stanford University from Massachusetts Institute of Technology where he served as professor of philosophy and political science, and as chair of both departments. He is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and among his many honors are the Harold E. Edgerton Award, the highest honor given to young faculty at M.I.T, the James and Ruth Levitan Prize in the Humanities, multiple teaching awards from M.I.T., and the Carlyle Professorship at Oxford University in 1999.

Stanford Departments
Law; Political Science