Books
- Ashton, Natalie Alana (2020). Social Epistemology and Relativism. New York: Routledge.
- Cruft Rowan (2019). Human Rights, Ownership and the Individual. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Heawood, Jonathan. (2019) The Press Freedom Myth London: Biteback.
Papers
2023
- Ashton, Natalie Alana and Johannes Steizinger. ‘Feminist Standpoint Theory vs. the Identitarian Ideology of the New Right: A Critical Comparison‘. in Social Theory and Practice (forthcoming)
2022
- Cruft, Rowan. ‘Communication and Rights‘, in K. Brownlee et al, eds., Being Social: The Philosophy of Social Human Rights. Oxford: Oxford University PRess.
- Cruft, Rowan. ‘Is there a right to internet access?‘, in C. Veliz, ed., The Oxford Handbook of Digital Ethics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Cruft, Rowan. ‘Journalism and Press Freedom as a Human Right‘, in symposium on Debating Media Accountability, online first in Journal of Applied Philosophy.
2021
- Ashton, Natalie Alana and Cruft, Rowan. ‘Rethinking the post-Truth Polarisation Narrative‘, Political Quarterly.
- Cruft, Rowan. ‘Legitimating Pandemic-Responsive Policy: Whose Voices Count When?’ in Fay Niker and Aveek Bhattacharya, Political Philosophy in a Pandemic. London: Bloomsbury
- Peter, Fabienne. ‘Epistemic Norms of Political Deliberation.’ In Michael Hannon and Jeroen de Ridder (eds.) Routledge Handbook of Political Epistemology. New York: Routledge.
- Peter, Fabienne. ‘Truth and Uncertainty in Political Justification.’ In Elizabeth Edenberg and Michael Hannon (eds.) Political Epistemology. Oxford: Oxford University.
2020
- Peter, Fabienne. ‘The Grounds of Political Legitimacy‘. Journal of the American Philosophical Association 6(3): 372-390.
- Ashton, Natalie Alana. ‘Relativism in Feminist Epistemologies‘. In Natalie Alana Ashton et al. (eds.), Social Epistemology and Relativism. New York: Routledge.
- Ashton, Natalie Alana. ‘Relativising Epistemic Advantage‘. In Martin Kusch (ed.), Routledge Handbook of Relativism. New York: Routledge.
- Heawood, Jonathan. “The Press Freedom Myth”. European Human Rights Law Review, Issue 1.
2019
- Peter, Fabienne. ‘Political Legitimacy under Epistemic Constraints: Why Public Reasons Matter‘. In Nomos, issue on Political Legitimacy, Jack Knight and Melissa Schwartzberg (eds.).
- Peter, Fabienne. ‘Legitimate Political Authority and Expertise.’ In Legitimacy: The State and Beyond, Wojciech Sadurski, Michael Sevel, and Kevin Walton (eds.). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
- Peter, Fabienne, “Epistemic Self-Trust and Doxastic Disagreements”. Erkenntnis 84: 1189-1205.
Media
- Cruft, Rowan. Communication & Collective Action. Holberg Symposium, University of Bergen.
Relevant Earlier Work
Books
- Peter, Fabienne. Democratic Legitimacy. New York: Routledge, 2008 (from 2011 also available in paperback).
Papers
- Ashton, Natalie. ‘Relativising Epistemic Advantage‘. In Routledge Handbook of Relativism, Martin Kusch (ed.). London: Routledge, forthcoming.
- Ashton, Natalie. ‘Appropriate Belief Without Evidence‘, Teorema: International Journal of Philosophy (2):7-28, 2015.
- Heawood, Jonathan & Morris, Brigit. ‘Press Codes and the Spirit of Equalities Legislation: implementing Leveson’, Communications Law 21:2, 2016.
Heawood, Jonathan. ‘Regulating Ethics: a way forward for charitable journalism’, Ethical Space 13:2/3, 2016.
Heawood, Jonathan. ‘Independent and Effective? The post-Leveson framework for press regulation’, Journal of Media Law 7:2, 2015.
Heawood, Jonathan. ‘Writerly Rights: free speech, privacy and HG Wells’, Critical Quarterly 56:4, 2014.
Heawood, Jonathan. ‘Taking Offence: free speech, blasphemy and the media’. In Religion and the News, Jolyon Mitchell and Owen Gower (eds.), Farnham: Ashgate, 2012.
Heawood, Jonathan. ‘Censorship and Fiction’. In The Encyclopedia of Twentieth-Century Fiction. Oxford: Blackwell, 2011. - Peter, Fabienne. ‘Political Legitimacy under Epistemic Constraints: Why Public Reasons Matter‘. In Nomos, issue on Political Legitimacy, Jack Knight and Melissa Schwartzberg (eds.), 2019.
- Peter, Fabienne. ‘Legitimate Political Authority and Expertise.’ In Legitimacy: The State and Beyond, Wojciech Sadurski, Michael Sevel, and Kevin Walton (eds.). Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2019.
Leveson Inquiry Evidence
- Cruft, Rowan. Written Witness Statement to the Leveson Inquiry. 2012.
- Cruft, Rowan. Transcript of Oral Testimony to the Leveson Inquiry. 2012.
- Heawood, Jonathan. Written Witness Statement to the Leveson Inquiry. 2012.
- Heawood, Jonathan & Kampfner, John. Transcript of Oral Testimony to the Leveson Inquiry. 2012.
Popular Articles
- Heawood, Jonathan. Article for Open Democracy on social media regulation, October 2017.
Film & Audio
- Ashton, Natalie (with Johannes Steizinger, Katherine Kinzel, Robin McKenna and Niels Jacob Wildschut). Recorded Lecture on The Politics of Human Nature and Cultural Differences for Uni Wien/Philosophische Audiothek, January 2017.
- Headwood, Jonathan. Filmed debate on Propaganda, Facts and Fake News for The Holberg Prize, December 2017.
- Peter, Fabienne. Filmed interview on political legitimacy by Luc Foisneau, CNRS May 2017.