What is our reaction when our state or government does something wrong?
Subscribe now for unlimited access.
$0/
(min cost $0)
or signup to continue reading
That will form the basis for the October Port Macquarie Philosophy Forum on Sunday, October 20.
The event will this month be held on Level 2 at the Glasshouse, from 6pm until 7.30pm.
Guest speaker Dr Stephanie Collins is a senior research fellow at the Dianoia Institute for Philosophy at the Australian Catholic University in Melbourne.
She received her BA (Hons) and Master of Public Policy from the University of Auckland. In 2013, she completed her PhD in Moral, Social, and Political Philosophy at the Australian National University.
From 2013 to 2018, she was lecturer in Political Theory at the University of Manchester in the UK. In 2018, she moved back to Australia to join the Dianoia Institute.
She is the author of two books - The Core of Care Ethics (2015) and Group Duties (2019) - and has published widely on collective responsibility, human rights, and group agency.
The topic is on citizens' responsibility for their states' actions.
"When our state does wrong, we are often inclined to distance ourselves from that wrong," she said.
"For example, we might point out that nothing we could have done would have made a difference. But when we find ourselves overseas, we might find ourselves defending or explaining our state's acts.
"This raises the question: who's responsible when the state does wrong? Is it just the prime minister? The government? The whole legislature?
"In democracies, are all voters responsible (or, perhaps, just those who voted for the governing parties)? And what does it mean to be 'responsible'?
"I approach these questions via the philosophical literature on collective agency. I'll work through three considerations that bear upon the polity's responsibility for the state's acts: the polity's control over what the state does; the polity's unity; and the influence of individual polity-members.
"I'll suggest that citizens' responsibility for their states' actions depends upon two underlying considerations: (1) the amount of discretion held by the state's office-holders; (2) the extent to which the democratic procedure is 'deliberative' rather than 'aggregative.'"
Dr Collins said even if citizens lack responsibility in the sense of blameworthiness, she will argue that their constitutive agential connections to the state give citizens duties regarding the state's actions.
For more information go to the website.
The October Port Macquarie Philosophy Forum is at the Glasshouse, Sunday October 20, 6pm until 7.30pm, Meeting room level 2, the Glasshouse. Entry is $10 for seniors and $5 pensioners and students.
Also making news:
While you're with us, you can now receive updates straight to your inbox from the Port Macquarie News. To make sure you're up to date with all the news, SIGN UP HERE.