Dear colleagues,
this is to inform you that due to illness the guest lecture by Cecile
Fabre that was planned for tomorrow, 14 Dec 2023, will have to be
postponed.
With kind regards,
Sophie Kroiss
Sophie Kroiss, BA BA
Organisationsassistenz für Univ.-Prof.in Dr. Angela Kallhoff, Professur
für Ethik
Institut für Philosophie
Raum D.0303, 3. Stock Universitätsstraße 7 (NIG), 1010 Wien
Telefon: +43-1-4277-46403
Am 07.12.2023 um 13:17 schrieb Sophie Kroiss:
Dear colleagues,
on behalf of Univ.-Prof. Angela Kallhoff and the Department of
Philosophy, I cordially invite you to a guest lecture titled
*"Humankind’s Common Cultural Heritage, Justice and Territorial Rights"*
by *Cecile Fabre *(All Souls College, Oxford).
Thu Dec. 14th, 2023, 6:30 p.m. in HS 3D (NIG)
For questions, contact sophie.kroiss(a)univie.ac.at
Abstract:
The thought that there are cultural landmarks which have universal
value is a familiar one. It is at the heart of UNESCO's and the World
Heritage's mission, and is affirmed in a number of international
declarations, not least the Convention Concerning the Protection of
World Cultural and Natural Heritage. For all its appeal, UNESCO's
ideals raise some deep concerns. In particular, it is not easy to
articulate an account of universal value; and it is not easy to show
why we are under moral obligations in respect of that heritage.
Nevertheless, I attempt to defend those ideals. I seek to show that
the protection of humankind's heritage, qua humankind's, not only is a
moral imperative: more strongly put, it is a duty of justice. I then
address one of the most important objections to it - namely that it
undermines states’ and their citizenries’ legitimate interest in
deciding what to do with landmarks which are located on their territory.
/Cecile Fabre a political philosopher, and currently Senior Research
Fellow at All Souls College, Oxford. She is also Professor of
Political Philosophy at the University of Oxford, and affiliated with
the Faculty of Philosophy, the Department of Politics and
International Relations, and Nuffield College, Oxford. Her research
interests are in theories of distributive justice; the philosophy of
democracy; just war theory; the ethics of foreign policy, with
particular focus on the ethics of economic statecraft and the ethics
of espionage.
She most recently published Spying Through a Glass Darkly: The Ethics
of Espionage and Counter-Intelligence (Oxford University Press 2022);
Economic Statecraft: Human Rights, Sanctions, and Conditionality
(Harvard University Press, 2018), preceded by (among others)
Cosmopolitan Peace (Oxford University Press, 2016), The Morality of
Defensive War, co-edited with Seth Lazar (Oxford University Press,
2014), Cosmopolitan War (Oxford University Press, 2012)./
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