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harvey.binghamton.eduharvey.binghamton.edu/~nhassoun/CV.docx · Web viewNicole J. Hassoun Curriculum Vitae Binghamton University Philosophy DepartmentP.O. Box 6000Binghamton, NY [email protected]

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Page 1: harvey.binghamton.eduharvey.binghamton.edu/~nhassoun/CV.docx · Web viewNicole J. Hassoun Curriculum Vitae Binghamton University Philosophy DepartmentP.O. Box 6000Binghamton, NY 13902-6000607-777-3725nhassoun@binghamton.edu

Nicole J. HassounCurriculum Vitae

Binghamton University Philosophy DepartmentP.O. Box 6000

Binghamton, NY 13902-6000607-777-3725

[email protected]

Professional Appointments: 2012 - Associate Professor, Department of Philosophy, Binghamton University

o 2017- Visiting Scholar, Philosophy Department, Cornell University

o 2017 - Co-Director, Institute for Justice and Well-Being, Binghamton University

o 2016-2017 Residential Fellow, The Philosophy of Hope and Optimism, Cornell University

o 2015- Affiliate with the Department of Health Outcomes and Administrative Sciences, School of Pharmacy, Binghamton University

o 2014 Visiting Researcher, The Franco-Swedish Program in Philosophy and Economics, Paris, France

o 2014 Senior Fellow, the Centre for Advanced Studies “Justitia Amplificata: Rethinking Justice – Applied and Global,” Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany

o 2013 Fellow at the Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, Binghamton University

o 2011 – Member of the steering committee of Academics Stand Against Poverty

o 2007 – Affiliate – Center for Bioethics and Health Law, University of Pittsburgh

2007-2012 Assistant Professor, Department of Philosophy, Carnegie Mellon University

o 2007- 2012 Member of the Center for Ethics and Policy, Carnegie Mellon University

o 2007- 2012 Affiliate – Program on International Relations, Carnegie Mellon University

o 2011-2012 Member of the executive committee of the Center for Human Rights Science, Carnegie Mellon University

o 2011 Visiting Fellow, the Centre for Advanced Studies “Justitia Amplificata: Rethinking Justice – Applied and Global,” Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany

o 2009-2010 Barbara McCoy Postdoctoral Fellow, the Center for Ethics in Society, Stanford University

o 2009-2010 (Summer, Winter, and Summer) Visiting Scholar, United Nations’ World Institute for Development Economics Research (http://www.wider.unu.edu/), Helsinki, Finland

o 2009 Scholar in Residence, Center for Ethics and Poverty Research, University of Salzburg, Austria

2005-2006 Visiting Lecturer, Department of Philosophy, UNC Chapel Hill

Page 2: harvey.binghamton.eduharvey.binghamton.edu/~nhassoun/CV.docx · Web viewNicole J. Hassoun Curriculum Vitae Binghamton University Philosophy DepartmentP.O. Box 6000Binghamton, NY 13902-6000607-777-3725nhassoun@binghamton.edu

o 2005-2006 Visiting Scholar, Department of Philosophy, Duke University

o 2006 University of North Carolina Fellow, Parr Center for Ethics

Education: Ph.D. Philosophy, University of Arizona, 2007

Dissertation: Shrinking Distance: Globalization and Global Justice Advisor: Thomas Christiano

M.A. Philosophy, University of Arizona, 2005

B.A. Summa Cum Laude Philosophy, University of Colorado, 2001

Areas of Specialization and Competence: Social and Political Philosophy, Ethics, Philosophy of Economics

Applied Ethics, Epistemology, Cognitive Science

Book Globalization and Global Justice: Shrinking Distance, Expanding Obligations, (2012), Cambridge

University Press: Cambridge. o Honorable Mention for the American Philosophical Association Book Prize:

http://www.apaonline.org/?booko Book Symposium: Nicole Hassoun “Beyond Globalization and Global Justice:

Development Theory and Practice” Analysis (2014) 74 (1): 119-134 (with introduction and reply to critics from American Philosophical Association author-meets-critics session Gillian Brock, Fernando Teson and Miriam Ronzoni)

o New Books in Philosophy interview here. o Special Issue of Public Affairs Quarterly (2014): 28, 3 contains some papers from the

MANCEPT session on Globalization and Global Justice o Symposium in Law, Ethics and Philosophy (2014): 2 with extended introduction

“Globalization and Global Justice in Review” and reply to criticso Reviewed in Ethics; Philosophical Review; Australian Journal of Political Science;

Ethical Theory and Moral Practice; Global Justice: Theory, Practice, Rhetoric; Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews and elsewhere. See, for instance, Kok-Chor Tan’s review essay here: https://oeconomia.revues.org/537.

Manuscript (under contract) Global Health Impact: Extending Access on Essential Medicines for the Poor, Oxford University

Press: Oxford.

Journal Articles1. “Ethical Consumption,” (forthcoming), Economics & Philosophy2. “Diversity in Philosophy Journals: Some New Data on Women in Philosophy,” with Sherri Conklin

and Isaac Wilhelm, (forthcoming), Philosophical Studies.

Page 3: harvey.binghamton.eduharvey.binghamton.edu/~nhassoun/CV.docx · Web viewNicole J. Hassoun Curriculum Vitae Binghamton University Philosophy DepartmentP.O. Box 6000Binghamton, NY 13902-6000607-777-3725nhassoun@binghamton.edu

3. “The Evolution of Wealth; Democracy or Revolution?” (2018), Wealth, Jack Knight ed., NOMOS, LVIII.

4. “Fair Trade: An Imperfect Obligation?” (forthcoming). Global Justice: Theory, Practice, Rhetoric. Runner up for the Jonathan Trejo-Mathys Essay Prize

5. “Individual Responsibility for Promoting Global Health: The Case for a New Kind of Socially Conscious Consumption”, (2016), Journal of Law, Medicine and Ethics, 44, 2:319-31.

6. “How People Think About Meeting Need,” with Nathan Lubchenco and Emir Malikov, (2016), Philosophical Psychology, 29, 7: 1029-1044.

7. “Measuring Health Burden without Discriminating Against the Disabled,” with Lucio Esposito, (2016), Journal of Public Health, doi: 10.1093/pubmed/fdw072

8. “The Global Health Impact Malaria Index”, (2016), American Journal of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene, 15-0409.

9. “Eternally Separated Lovers: The Argument from Love,” (2015), Australasian Journal of Philosophy, 93 (4):633-643.

10. “Coercion, Legitimacy, and Global Justice,” (2015), Journal of Social Philosophy, 46, 2: 178-196.11. “The Global Health Impact Index,” (2015), PLoS ONE. 10(12): e0141374. DOI: 10.13“Ethical

Consumption,” (forthcoming), Economics & Philosophy12. “The Human Right to Health?” (2015), Philosophy Compass, 10, 4: 275–283

13. “Globalization, Global Justice, and Global Health Impact,” (2014), Public Affairs Quarterly, 28, 3: 231-258

14. “An Aspect of Variable Population Poverty Comparisons: Does Adding a Rich Person to a Population Reduce Poverty?” (2014), Economics and Philosophy, 30, 2: 163-174 previous version “Another Mere Addition Paradox?” available as an UNU WIDER Working Paper at: http://www.wider.unu.edu/publications/working-papers/en_GB/working-papers/

15. “Coercion, Legitimacy, and Individual Freedom: A Reply to Sondernholm,” (2014), reply to Jorn Sondernholm’s critique of my “World Poverty and Individual Freedom” (American Philosophical Quarterly 2008), Journal of Philosophical Research, 39:191-198

16. “New Institutionalism and Foreign Aid,” (2014), Global Justice: Theory, Practice, Rhetoric, 7: 12-27 PDF

17. “Conserving Nature; Preserving Identity,” with David Wong (2014 but appears in 2017), Journal of Chinese Philosophy, Special Supplement to Vol. 41.

18. “Global Justice and Charity: A Brief for a New Approach to Empirical Philosophy,” (2014), Philosophy Compass, 9, 12: 884–893

19. “Human Rights and the Minimally Good Life,” (2013), Res Philosophica, 90, 3: 413-438 (special issue on Well-being other contributors include Richard Kraut, Peter Railton, Erik Angner, Tobias Hoffman and Valerie Tiberius)

20. “An Aspect of Variable Population Poverty Comparisons,” with Subbu Subramanian, (2012), Journal of Development Economics. 98, 2: 238-241. Draft available as a UNU WIDER Working Paper, at: http://www.wider.unu.edu/publications/working-papers/en_GB/working-papers/

21. “The Problem of Debt-for-Nature Swaps from a Human Rights Perspective,” (2012), Journal of Applied Philosophy, 9, 4: 359-377.

22. “Global Health Impact,” (2012), Developing World Bioethics, 12, 3:121-134

Page 4: harvey.binghamton.eduharvey.binghamton.edu/~nhassoun/CV.docx · Web viewNicole J. Hassoun Curriculum Vitae Binghamton University Philosophy DepartmentP.O. Box 6000Binghamton, NY 13902-6000607-777-3725nhassoun@binghamton.edu

23. “Sustaining Cultures in the Face of Globalization,” with David Wong, (2012), Culture and Dialogue, 2, 2: 73-98

24. “Raz on the Right to Autonomy,” (2011), European Journal of Philosophy, 22, 1: 96–109 25. “Free Trade, Poverty, and Inequality,” (2011), The Journal of Moral Philosophy, 8, 1: 5-44.

26. “The Anthropocentric Advantage? Environmental Ethics and Climate Change Policy,” (2011), Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy, 1, 2: 235-257.

27. “Empirical Evidence and the Case for Foreign Aid,” (2010), Public Affairs Quarterly, 24, 1: 1-20.28. “Meeting Need,” (2009), Utilitas, 21, 3: 250-275.

29. “Free Trade and the Environment,” (2009), Environmental Ethics, 31, 51-66.o Invited for reprint in Fair Trade and Global Justice: Theoretical Perspectives (Expected

contributors include: David Miller, Chandran Kukathas or Hillel Steiner, Daniel Butt, Gillian Brock, and Peter Dietsch)

30. “World Poverty and Individual Freedom,” (2008), American Philosophical Quarterly, 45, 2: 191-198.31. “Free Trade, Poverty, and the Environment,” (2008), Public Affairs Quarterly, 22, 4: 353-380.

32. “The Moral Permissibility of Infanticide,” with Uriah Kreigle, (2008), Journal of Applied Philosophy, 25, 1: 45-55.

33. “Nanotechnology, Enhancement, and Human Nature,” (2009) NanoEthics: Ethics for Technologies that Converge at the Nanoscale, 2, 3, 265-275.

o To be reprinted in: Nanotechnology and Human Enhancement: An NSF Report. Fritz Allhoff, Patrick Lin, James Moor, and John Weckert eds. National Science Foundation.

34. “The Case for Renewable Energy and a New Energy Plan,” (2005), International Journal of Environmental, Cultural, Economic & Social Sustainability, 1, 5: 197-208.

Review Essays, Book Chapters and Commentaries1. “Climate Change and Development,” forthcoming, with Anders Herliz, Climate Justice: Integrating

Economics and Philosophy, Ravi Kanbar and Henry Shue eds., Oxford University Press

2. “Aid and Future Generations”, forthcoming, The Oxford Handbook of Global Justice, Thom Brooks ed., Oxford University Press: Oxford (expected contributors include: Charles Beitz, Gillian Brock, Allen Buchanan, Jiwei Ci, Rainer Forst, Ashok Acharya, Stephen Gardiner, Carol Gould, Janos Kis, David Miller, David Rodin, Henry Shue, John Tasioulas, and Lea Ypi)

3. “From Free Trade to Fair Trade,” 2018, Oxford Handbook of Political Theory, Chris Brown and Robyn Eckersley eds.

4. “Basic Needs,” (2016), International Development and Human Aid: Principles, Norms and Institutions for the Global Sphere, Paulo Barcelos and Gabriele De Angelis eds., in the Studies in Global Justice and Human Rights series, Thom Brooks ed., Edinburg University Press.

5. “Global Justice and Charitable Giving,” (2016), The Blackwell Companion to Experimental Philosophy, Justin Sytsma and Wesley Buckwalter eds., Blackwell.

6. “Consumption” (2014), Handbook of Global Ethics, Heather Widdows and Darrel Moellendorf eds., Routledge Press: London.

7. “Global Justice in a Globalizing World” (2014), New Waves in Ethics, Thom Brooks ed. Vincent Hendricks and Duncan Pritchard series eds. Palgrave and Macmillian: Basingstoke.

Page 5: harvey.binghamton.eduharvey.binghamton.edu/~nhassoun/CV.docx · Web viewNicole J. Hassoun Curriculum Vitae Binghamton University Philosophy DepartmentP.O. Box 6000Binghamton, NY 13902-6000607-777-3725nhassoun@binghamton.edu

8. “Geoengineering the Planet”, (2013). Ethical Issues in Engineering Biological and Ecological Systems. Ronald Sandler and John Basl ed. Lexington Books: Lanham.

9. “Measuring Global Health Impact: Incentivizing Research and Development of Drugs for Neglected Diseases” (2012), Justice And Global Health Inequalities, Patti Lenard and Christine Straehle eds., Global Justice and Human Rights Series, Edinburgh University Press.

10. “On Human Rights: In Personhood and Practice,” (2012), review essay on James Griffin’s On Human Rights, The Journal of Philosophy. CIX, 7: 462.

11. “World Bank Rules for Aid Allocation: Moral Hazard?” (2012), Economic Justice. Helen Stacy and Win-Chiat Lee. Springer Press: Dordrecht.

12. Hassoun, Nicole. 2012. “Some Reflections on The Moral Dimensions of Human Rights,” review essay of Carl Wellman's The Moral Dimensions of Human Rights, Jurisprudence, 3, 1: 253-262.

13. “Bridging the Gap in Scientific Research” with Julian Culp, (2012) Debating Science: Deliberation, Values and the Common Good. Prometheus Press: Amherst.

14. “Making Free Trade Fair,” (2011), New Waves in Ethics. Vincent Hendricks and Duncan Pritchard eds. Palgrave and Macmillian: Basingstoke.

15. “The Duty to Disclose (Even More) Adverse Clinical Trial Results,” (2009), The American Journal of Bioethics, 9, 8: 33-34. (Commentary on S. Matthew Liao, Mark Sheehan, and Steve Clarke’s "The Duty to Disclose Adverse Clinical Trial Results”).

16. “Human Rights, Needs, and Autonomy,” (2009), An Anthology of Philosophical Studies. Volume 3. Edited by Patricia Hanna, AITNER: Athens.

Other Publications:1. “Review of Global Justice and International Affairs,” (2016), with Julian Culp, The Journal of Moral

Philosophy, review of Thom Brooks (ed.). Global Justice and International Affairs. Leiden: Brill, 2012. Vol. 13, No. 2: 249–252.

2. “Poverty, Agency and Human Rights in Review,” (2016), with Peter Stone and Julian Culp, review of Diana Tietjens Meyers Poverty, Agency and Human Rights. Ethics.  Vol. 126, No. 1: 234 – 238.

3. “Globalization and Global Justice,” (2015), with Tucker Sechrest, The Blackwell Encyclopedia of Race, Ethnicity and Nationalism. Published Online: 30 DEC 2015 DOI: 10.1002/9781118663202.wberen451

4. “Reflections on Global Justice and Due Process,” (2014), with Antony Reeves, review of Larry May, Global Justice and Due Process, Mind, 123 (492): 1208-1212 doi:10.1093/mind/fzu139

5. “Fair Trade Bio” (2013), Compendium of Global Bioethics. Henk A.M.J. ten Have ed. Springer Press: Dordrecht.

6. “The Moral Relevance of Distance” (2012), with Gillian Brock, International Encyclopedia of Ethics, Hugh LaFollete ed. Wiley-Blackwell: Hoboken.

7. “Needs” (2012), with Gillian Brock, International Encyclopedia of Ethics, Hugh LaFollete ed. Wiley-Blackwell.

8. Some Reflections on The Practice of Global Citizenship, (2012), review of Luis Cabrera’s The Practice of Global Citizenship, Ethics.

9. Council on Foreign Relations Development Channel Op Ed: Emerging Voices: Nicole Hassoun on Fair Trade for Health, (2012), Council on Foreign Relations. Available at:

Page 6: harvey.binghamton.eduharvey.binghamton.edu/~nhassoun/CV.docx · Web viewNicole J. Hassoun Curriculum Vitae Binghamton University Philosophy DepartmentP.O. Box 6000Binghamton, NY 13902-6000607-777-3725nhassoun@binghamton.edu

http://blogs.cfr.org/development-channel/2012/06/25/emerging-voices-nicole-hassoun-on-fair-trade-for-health/

10. “Global Poverty” (2012), The Encyclopedia of Global Justice, Deen Chaterjee ed. Oxford University Press: Oxford. Approx. 2,000 words.

11. “Libertarianism,” (2012), The Encyclopedia of Global Justice, Deen Chaterjee ed. Oxford University Press: Oxford. Approx. 2,000 words.

12. “Pharmaceutical Justice,” (2012), The Encyclopedia of Global Justice, Deen Chaterjee ed. Oxford University Press: Oxford. Approx. 2,000 words.

13. “Ideal Moral Theory,” (2012), with Julian Culp, The Encyclopedia of Global Justice, Deen Chaterjee ed. Oxford University Press: Oxford. Approx. 2,000 words.

14. “Fair Trade,” (2012), The Encyclopedia of Global Justice, Deen Chaterjee ed. Oxford University Press: Oxford. Approx. 2,000 words.

15. “Free Trade,” (2012), The Encyclopedia of Global Justice, Deen Chaterjee ed. Oxford University Press: Oxford. Approx. 2,000 words.

16. “Gillian Brock,” (2012), The Encyclopedia of Global Justice, Deen Chaterjee ed. Oxford University Press: Oxford. Approx. 2,000 words.

17. “Review of Roderick T. Long and Tibor R. Machan, Anarchism/Minarchism: Is a Government Part of a Free Country?” (2009), review of Roderick T. Long and Tibor R. Machan, Anarchism/Minarchism: Is a Government Part of a Free Country?Notre Dame Philosophical Reviews. Available at: http://ndpr.nd.edu/review.cfm?id=15866

18. “Review of Global Justice: A Cosmopolitan Account,” (2009), review of Gillian Brock, Global Justice: A Cosmopolitan Account. Oxford University Press: Oxford. Australian Journal of Legal Philosophy.

19. “Energy Issues” (2005), in Social Issues: An Encyclopedia of Controversies, History, and Debates edited by James Ciment. M.E. Sharpe, Armonk, New York, 609-625.

20. “Global Poverty and Individual Responsibility: An Adequate Account?” review of Abigail Gosselin, Global Poverty and Individual Responsibility. Rowman & Littlefield Publishers: Lanham, MD, (2009), in Human Rights Review.

21. “Review of Bryan G. Norton, Searching for Sustainability: Interdisciplinary Essays in the Philosophy of Conservation Biology,” (2005), with David Schmidtz, Environmental Ethics, Spring, 93-96.

Work in Progress:1. “Global Health and Global Justice,” invited for a collection edited by Dan Wikler, Nir Eyal, Samia

Hurst, and Drew Schroeder to be submitted to Oxford University Press Population-Level Bioethics series

2. “Beyond Measure? Reflections on the Value of Life,” with Anders Herlitz and Lucio Esposito, invited for Dimensions of Poverty, Philosophy & Poverty by Springer (http://www.springer.com/series/15416).

3. “Universal Health Coverage Post-2015: Measuring Global Health Impact,” with Aidan Hollis and Larry Gostin

4. “The Global Health Impact Index,” with Aidan Hollis

5. “Poverty Measurement and the Value of Human Life,” with Lucio Esposito

Page 7: harvey.binghamton.eduharvey.binghamton.edu/~nhassoun/CV.docx · Web viewNicole J. Hassoun Curriculum Vitae Binghamton University Philosophy DepartmentP.O. Box 6000Binghamton, NY 13902-6000607-777-3725nhassoun@binghamton.edu

6. “The State of the Discipline: Some New Data on Women in Philosophy,” with Sherri Conklin7. “Representation of Women in Philosophy Journals: Some New Data,” with Sherri Conklin

8. “Coercion, Legitimacy, and Justice: A Defense of Coercion Accounts of Justice’s Grounds,” under revision for Journal of Moral Philosophy

9. “Equality and Time,” with Anders Herlitz10. “Cost-Effectiveness: A Critique,” with Anders Herlitz

11. “Coercion Beyond Borders” 12. “Fair Trade Under Fire”

13. “A Brief for Pluralism: Non-Voluntary Relations and Global Justice”, under revision for Journal of Social Philosophy

14. “Libertarian Welfare Rights?” 15. “Ethical Consumption: Hope and Efficacy”

16. “The Aesthetic Value of Nature”17. “Conceptual Relativism”

18. “Utopianism in Ideal Theory and Practice” 19. “The Human Right to Health”

20. “Realistic Idealism in National and International Affairs21. “Non-Ideal Theory, Globalization, and Global Justice”

22. “Defending The Human Right to Health: Hope, Social Determinants, and Public Goods”

Select Conferences and Presentations: 1. 2018 “The Human Right to Health and the Virtue of Creative Resolve,” Ithaca College, Ithaca, New

York2. 2018 (pending) “The Virtue of Creative Resolve,” Cornell University Workshop, Ithaca, New York

3. 2018 (pending), “Ethical Consumption,” Philosophy, Politics and Economics Workshop, University of Colorado, Boulder

4. 2018 (pending), TBA, Beamer-Schneider Lecture in Ethics, Morals, and Civics, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio

5. 2018 (pending) Keynote Address on Human Right to Health, Hope, and the Virtue of Creative Resolve,” 2018 Bioethics Lecture for the International Conference on Global Human Rights http://www.cvent.com/events/international-conference-on-global-human-rights/event-summary-ae9d60447c65440dab8c0167e9968107.aspx, Brookings, South Dakota

6. 2018 (pending), “The Minimally Good Life,” Happiness & Wellbeing Midpoint Collaboratory, Saint Louis, Missouri

7. 2018 (pending), TBA panel at the FAIR Inaugural Conference, Center for Empirical Research on Fairness, Inequality, and Rationality, Bergen, Norway

8. 2018 “Human Rights and Global Health Impact,” Fair Priority Setting in Global Health, Bergen Summer Research School, http://www.uib.no/en/rs/bsrs/112952/fair-priority-setting-global-health

9. 2018 (pending), “Hope and the Virtue of Creative Resolve,” New Directions in the Philosophy of Hope, Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany

Page 8: harvey.binghamton.eduharvey.binghamton.edu/~nhassoun/CV.docx · Web viewNicole J. Hassoun Curriculum Vitae Binghamton University Philosophy DepartmentP.O. Box 6000Binghamton, NY 13902-6000607-777-3725nhassoun@binghamton.edu

10. 2018 “The Minimally Good Life: Some Reflections on Philosophy of the Science of Well-being,” author-meets-critics session on Anna Alexandrova’s book The Philosophy of the Science of Well-being, Pacific Division American Philosophical Association, San Diego, California

11. 2018 “Consumption and Social Change,” Philosophy and Economics Meeting, University of Colorado, Boulder

12. 2018 “Hope and the Virtue of Creative Resolve,” The Social and Political Dimensions of Hope Session, the Philosophy, Politics and Economics Society Meeting, New Orleans, Louisiana

13. 2018 “New Data on Women in Philosophy,” with Sherri Conklin, the Philosophy, Politics and Economics Society Meeting, New Orleans, Louisiana

14. 2018 commentary at the Law, Economics and Conflict: Contemporary Challenges CRADLE Conference, Cornell Club, New York

15. 2018 “Measuring Global Health Impact,” International Nutrition Seminar, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York

16. 2018 “Human Rights and the Minimally Good Life,” Eastern Division American Philosophical Association, Savannah, Georgia

17. 2018 “Realism and Idealism in International Affairs: A Brief for Utopian Political Theory,” Society for Applied Philosophy, Eastern Division American Philosophical Association, Savannah, Georgia

18. 2017 “The Human Right to Health, Hope, and the Minimally Good Life” Philosophy Department, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee

19. 2017 “Human Rights, Hope, and the Virtue of Creative Resolve,” Keynote Lecture, Dimensions of Poverty, the Centre of Advanced Studies "Justitia Amplificata" and the Free University of Berlin, Berlin, Germany

20. 2017 “The Minimally Good Life and the Human Right to Health,” Happiness & Wellbeing Midpoint Collaboratory, Saint Louis, Missouri

21. 2017 “The Virtue of Creative Resolve: Epistemic and Moral,” Bled Philosophical Conference, Bled, Slovenia

22. 2017 “The Virtue of Creative Resolve,” Hope and Optimism Conference, Los Angeles, California23. 2017 “Global Health and Access to Essential Medicines,” Philosophy Department, Utica College,

Utica, New York24. 2017 “Human Rights, Hope, and the Virtue of Creative Resolve,” Philosophy Department, Concordia

University, Montreal25. 2017 “The Human Right to Health, Hope, and the Virtue of Creative Resolve,” Philosophy

Department, University of Massachusetts Boston, Boston26. 2017 “The Human Right to Health, Hope, and Creative Resolve,” Philosophy Department, University

of California San Diego, San Diego, California27. 2017 “The Global Health Impact Project: An Overview,” Department of Family Medicine and Public

Health, University of California San Diego, San Diego, California28. 2017 “Ethical Consumption and Global Health,” Rady School of Management, University of

California San Diego, San Diego, California29. 2017 “The Human Right to Health,” Society for Applied Philosophy session, Eastern Division APA,

Baltimore, Maryland30. 2016 “The Human Right to Health and Access to Essential Medicine,” Middlebury College,

Middlebury, Vermont

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31. 2016 “Hope and the Human Right to Health,” Human Rights Institute, University of Connecticut, Mansfield, Connecticut

32. 2016 “Realistic Idealism: Hope and the Virtue of Creative Resolve, ” Political Realism and Practical Morality: Historical and Theoretical Perspectives, Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Budapest, Hungary

33. 2016 “Hope and the Virtue of Creative Resolve,” Hope and Optimism Midpoint Collaboratory Conference, Estes Park, Colorado

34. 2016 “The Human Right to Health and Access Essential Medicine,” Marist College, Poughkeepsie, New York

35. 2015 “Is Mutual Concern Necessary or Sufficient for Social Democracy?”, comments on Richard Miller’s “The Ethics of Social Democracy,” Workshop for Oxford Studies in Political Philosophy, Syracuse, New York

36. 2015, “The Human Right to Health”, Philosophy Department Colloquium, Queen's University, Ontario, Canada

37. 2015 “Global Health Equity in Practice: Ethical Consumption of Global Health Impact Labelled Goods,” Global Health/Global Justice 2015: Making New Medicines Accessible to All, Toronto, Canada

38. 2015 “The Human Right to Health: An Argument for Creative Resolve,” virtual Keynote Address, International Colloquium on Justice, Democracy and Political Emotions in Transnational Perspective, Recife, Brazil

39. 2015 “Reflections on Dangerous Climate Change,” Authors Meets Critics Session on Darrel Moellendorf’s The Moral Challenge of Dangerous Climate Change, Pacific Division APA, Vancouver, Canada

40. 2014 “Global Health, Human Rights, and Access to Essential Medicines,” Philosophy Department Colloquium, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York

41. 2014 “The Global Health Impact Model,” Presentation and Invited Expert for the Consultation meeting to review and improve Global Fund methods to estimate health impact of the supported programs, Global Fund, Geneva, Switzerland, 10 July 2014

42. 2014 “Making Medicines Matters,” Keynote Lecture, Förderverein Philosophy & Economics e. V., Frankfurt, Germany

43. 2014 “Fair Trade in Theory and Practice: The Case for Purchasing Global Health Impact Certified Goods,” Global Economic Justice Conference, Justitia Amplificata, Frankfurt, Germany

44. 2014 “Aiding the Poor in Present and Future Generations” Justitia Amplificata Colloquium, Free University Berlin, Berlin, Germany

45. 2014 “Dealing Ethically with Disability” (paper with Lucio Esposito), Swedish-Franco Program in Philosophy and Economics, Paris, France

46. 2014 “Increasing Global Health Impact”, Keynote speaker, Rochester Institute of Technology’s 5th Annual Undergraduate Philosophy Conference, Rochester, New York

47. 2014 “The Moral Case for a New Kind of Fair Trade,” International Society for Environmental Ethics session at the Pacific Division APA, San Francisco, California

48. 2014 “Environmental Ethics and Human Identity,” Philosophy Department, Connecticut College, New London, Connecticut

Page 10: harvey.binghamton.eduharvey.binghamton.edu/~nhassoun/CV.docx · Web viewNicole J. Hassoun Curriculum Vitae Binghamton University Philosophy DepartmentP.O. Box 6000Binghamton, NY 13902-6000607-777-3725nhassoun@binghamton.edu

49. 2014 Commentator on William Forbath’s “Wealth, Commonwealth, & the Constitution of Opportunity: A Story of Two Traditions,” for the NOMOS sessions at the American Society for Political and Legal Philosophy meeting, Washington D.C.

50. 2013 “Global Health and Global Justice,” Edmund J. Safra Center for Ethics, Harvard University, Cambridge

51. 2013 “Microfinance and How People Think about Meeting Needs,” University of Buffalo Conference in Experimental Philosophy, Buffalo, New York

52. 2013 “Fair Trade Under Fire,” Institute for Advanced Studies in the Humanities, Binghamton, New York

53. 2013 “Beyond Globalization and Global Justice: Reply to Critics,” Author Meets Critics Session on Globalization and Global Justice, MANCEPT, Manchester, UK

54. 2013 “Legitimacy and Global Justice,” Mellon Sawyer Seminar, CUNY Graduate School, Manhattan, New York

55. 2013 “Coercion, Legitimacy, and Justice: A Defense of Coercion Accounts of Justice’s Grounds,” Theories of Global Justice University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK

56. 2013 “Thinking about Development in Theory and Practice: Response to Critics,” Authors Meets Critics Session on Globalization and Global Justice, Pacific Division APA, San Francisco, California

57. 2013 “The Extending Access Index,” World Politics Seminar, Binghamton University, Binghamton, New York.

58. 2012 Invited discussant, Legal Empowerment and Justice for the Poor, Council for Foreign Relations Roundtable, Washington D.C.

59. 2012 “Global Health Impact Indicators: Incentivizing Access to Essential Medicines”, invited paper, Global Administrative Law Seminar, Rome, Italy

60. 2012 “Variable Population Poverty Comparisons,” Department of Economics, Binghamton University, New York

61. 2012 “Beyond TRIPS: Global Health Impact and Access to Essential Medicines,” International Law Conference, Binghamton University, New York

62. 2012 “Measuring Global Health Impact,” keynote speaker, Center for Science, Ethics & Public Policy, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware

63. 2012 “How People Think About Meeting Needs,” keynote speaker, Academics Stand Against Poverty Inaugural Conference, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut

64. 2012 “Basic Needs,” Henle Conference on Happiness and Well-Being, invited lecture, Saint Louis University, Saint Louis, Missouri

65. 2012 “The Consistency of Some Common Libertarian Commitments” invited lecture, philosophy department, St. Andrews University, St. Andrews, Scotland

66. 2012 “Legitimacy in our Globalizing World,” invited lecture, Tanner Conference on Global Justice: Economic Globalization, Crisis, and the Common Good, Salt Lake City, Utah

67. 2012 “Libertarian Welfare Rights?” invited lecture philosophy department, Binghamton University, Binghamton, New York

68. 2012 “Conserving Nature; Preserving Identity,” invited lecture philosophy department, University of Hawaii, Oahu, Hawaii

69. 2012 “Libertarian Welfare Rights? Reflections on the Coherence of Some Common Libertarian Commitments” invited lecture philosophy department, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida

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70. 2012 “Conserving Nature, Preserving Identity” (written with David Wong), invited lecture, Environmental Studies, Salt Lake City, Utah

71. 2012 “Libertarian Welfare Rights?” invited lecture philosophy department, University of Waterloo, Ontario, Canada

72. 2012 “Coercion, Legitimacy, and Global Justice”, Conference on Global Justice, invited lecture, CERSES, Université Paris Descartes and CNRS, Paris, France

73. 2012 “Libertarian Welfare Rights? Reflections on the Coherence of Some Common Libertarian Commitments”, invited lecture, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa

74. 2012 Invited discussant, Workshop on Science and Human Rights, Center for Science, Ethics & Public Policy, University of Delaware, Newark, Delaware

75. 2011 “Global Health Impact,” invited lecture, political science department, University of California San Diego, San Diego, California

76. 2011 “Global Health Impact: Extending Access on Essential Medicines,” invited lecture, Philosophy Department, London School of Economics, London

77. 2011 “Promoting Global Health: Extending Access on Essential Medicines,” invited lecture, William and Lee College, Lexington, Virginia

78. 2011 “Conserving Nature; Preserving Identity,” (written with David Wong), invited lecture, Colorado State University, Ft. Collins, Colorado

79. 2011 “Measuring Poverty in Variable Populations,” invited lecture, National Center for Health Statistics, Hyattsville, Maryland

80. 2011 “Debt-for-Climate Swaps,” Interdisciplinary Conference on Climate Change, invited lecture, Politics Department, Oxford University, Oxford, UK

81. 2011 “Justice and Future Generations,” invited lecture, Northeastern University Workshop in Applied Philosophy, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts

82. 2011 “Coercion and Legitimacy,” Justitia Amplificata: Rethinking Justice – Applied and Global, Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany

83. 2011 “Rating Research and Development: Promoting Global Health,” Center for Advanced Studies, Goethe University, Frankfurt, Germany

84. 2011 “Global Health Impact: Rating Research and Development of Drugs for Neglected Disease,” Academics Stand Against Poverty, Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut

85. 2011 “Poverty in Changing Populations,” Workshop on Intergenerational Justice, invited lecture Chaire Hoover, Louvaine-la-Nueve, Belgium

86. 2011 “Coercion, Legitimacy, and Global Justice,” invited lecture, department of government, London School of Economics, London, England

87. 2011 “Global Health Impact: Extending Access on Essential Medicines”, invited lecture, Center for Philosophy, Justice, and Health, University College London, England

88. 2011 “Fair Trade Drugs” key note lecture, Interdisciplinary Association for Philosophy and Religious Studies, California University, California, Pennsylvania

89. 2011 “The Aesthetic of Wilderness”, invited lecture, philosophy department, University of Georgia, Athens, Georgia

90. 2010 “What’s Wrong with Geoengineering the Planet?” invited lecture, National Science Foundation Workshop on the Ethics and Science of Geoengineering, University of Montana-Missoula http://www.umt.edu/ethics/EthicsGeoengineering/advisors.aspx

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91. 2010 “Does the World Bank Really Work for the Poor? International Aid in Theory and Practice” AMINTAPHIL, Rochester, New York

92. 2010 “Variable Population Poverty Comparisons,” written with Subbu Subramanian, Social Choice and Welfare Annual Conference, Moscow, Russia.

93. 2010 “World Bank Rules for Aid Allocation and Good Development,” United Nations’ University, World Institute for Development Economics Research, Helsinki, Finland

94. 2010 “The Aesthetic Value of Wildness,” Environment, Aesthetics, and the Arts, Annual Conference of the Nordic Society for Aesthetics, Lahti, Finland.

95. 2010 “Fair Trade Health: Access to Essential Drugs for the Poor,” invited lecture, Santa Clara University Ethics at Noon Seminar, Santa Clara, California

96. 2010 “Utopianism and the Ideal/Non-ideal Theory Distinction,” invited lecture, Penn-Yale Works-in-Progress Philosophy Workshop on Utopianism in Moral, Political, and Legal Theory, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

97. 2010 “Poverty and Aid,” Global Connections, Global Responsibilities Lecture Series, Humanities Center and the Center for the Advancement of Applied Ethics and Political Philosophy, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

98. 2010 “Coercion, Legitimacy, and Global Justice,” Workshop in Social and Political Theory, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee

99. 2010 Commentary on Ann Cudd’s “Feminism and Capitalism,” Pacific Division APA, San Francisco, California

100. 2010 “Libertarian Welfare Rights? An Inquiry into the Coherence of Some Common Libertarian Commitments,” invited lecture, University of Manitoba’s Philosophy Department and Center for Professional and Applied Ethics, Winnipeg, Canada

101. 2010 “Fair Trade in Pharmaceutical and Biotechnology,” Universities Allied for Essential Medicines Lecture Series, Stanford University, Stanford, California

102. 2010 “Promoting Global Health: Extending Access on Essential Drugs and Technologies,” “World Poverty and institutional Legitimacy,” “Health Impact Labeling?” invited lectures, VI Simposio Internacional De Economía Y Filosofía, and the Universidad De Antioquia, Medellin, Columbia (http://santiagolondonouribe.org/2010/02/15/vi-simposio-internacional-de-economia-y-filosofia-filosofia-politica-y-crisis-mundial/)

103. 2010 “Incentivizing Research and Development of Drugs for Neglected Disease,” invited lecture, Stanford Center for Biomedical Ethics, Stanford University, Stanford University

104. 2009 “Variable Population Poverty Comparisons,” with Subbu Subramanian, United Nations’ University, World Institute for Development Economics Research, Helsinki, Finland

105. 2009 “Free Trade, Poverty and Inequality,” invited lecture, Katedra Studiów Europejskich, Akademii Ekonomicznej w Krakowie, Krawkow, Poland

106. 2009 “Debt-for-Nature Swaps,” Theodore and Frances Geballe Research Workshop in the Humanities, Center for Ethics and Society, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California

107. 2009 “Libertarian Welfare Rights?,” Bay Area Forum For Law & Ethics, Berkeley, CA108. 2009 “Global Climate Change and the Nature of Liberalism,” Ethics of Climate Change:

Intergenerational Justice and the Global Challenge, Newark, Delaware109. 2009 “Institutional Legitimacy, Individual Autonomy, and Global Justice,” Global Justice Workshop,

Center for Ethics and Society, Stanford University, Palo Alto, California

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110. 2009 “Libertarians Welfare Rights?,” Joint Sessions of the Aristotelian Society and the Mind Association, University of East Anglia, Norwich, England

111. 2009, “Meeting Needs,” United Nations’ University, World Institute for Development Economics Research, Helsinki, Finland

112. 2009 “Fair Trade Bio,” invited lecture, department of philosophy, Newcastle on the Tyne, UK113. 2009 “Global Justice in a Globalizing World,” invited lecture, department of philosophy, University

of Rochester, Rochester, New York114. 2009 “Why Libertarians Should Endorse Some Welfare Rights as Human Rights,” invited lecture,

University of Washington Conference on Global Justice in the 21st Century, Seattle, Washington (http://depts.washington.edu/uwch/projects_conferences_global0809.htm)

115. 2009 Invited discussant, Rutgers University Conference on James Griffin’s book On Human Rights, Rutgers, New Jersey

116. 2009 Invited commentator on “Liberalism and the Problem of Religious Justification,” Central Division APA, Chicago, Illinois

117. 2009 Invited commentator on “Not 'Who?' but 'Why?': Information and Consent in the Ethics of Contemporary Health Care Decision-making,” Pacific Division APA, Vancouver, Canada

118. 2009 Invited Critic for the Symposium on Anarchism and Minarchism, Eastern Division APA, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

119. 2009 “Conditions for Freedom in a Diverse World,” AMINTAPHIL conference on Free Speech in a Diverse World, Villanova University, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

120. 2009 “Extending Access to Essential Drugs and Technologies: Making Trade in Pharmaceutical- and Bio- Technology Fair,” invited lecture, department of philosophy, Dickinson College, Carlisle, Pennsylvania

121. 2009 “Nanotechnology, Enhancement, and Human Nature,” invited lecture, University of Western Michigan, Kalamazoo, Michigan

122. 2009 “Debt-for-Nature Swaps,” presentation by Matt Frank (virtual attendance), International Society for Environmental Ethics and the International Association for Environmental Philosophy, Allenspark, Colorado

123. 2008 “Fair Trade and Investment in Pharmaceutical- and Bio-technology,” American Society for Bioethics and Humanities Annual Meeting, Cleveland, Ohio

124. 2008 “Should Libertarians Be (Some Kind of) Welfare Liberals?,” Rocky Mountain Ethics Conference, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado

125. 2008 “Why Libertarians Must Be Welfare Liberals,” invited lecture, department of philosophy, Leeds University, Leeds, England

126. 2008 “Rights, Needs, and Autonomy,” 3rd International Conference on Philosophy, Athens, Greece127. 2008 “Why Libertarians Should be Welfare Liberals,” invited paper, The Morris Colloquium,

University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado128. 2008 “Free Trade, Poverty, and Climate Change,” Pacific Division APA Special Session Arranged by

the Society for Philosophy and Public Affairs, Pasadena, California129. 2008 Invited commentator on “The Pond, the Envelope, and the Vintage Sedan: Taking Global

Poverty Seriously,” Pacific Division APA, Pasadena, California130. 2008 “Free Trade and the Environment,” Energy and Responsibility: A Conference on Ethics and the

Environment, Knoxville, Tennessee

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131. 2007 “Free Trade, Poverty, and the Environment,” Environment Energy Ethics Conference, Newark, Delaware

132. 2007 “Rights, Needs, and Autonomy,” Northwest Philosophy Conference, Portland, Oregon133. 2007 Discussant, Applied Philosophy as Common Ground, Princeton, New Jersey

134. 2007 “Securing Autonomy; Meeting Needs,” “Health Aid,” and “World Poverty and Individual Freedom,” invited lectures, departments of philosophy and medical history and ethics, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington

135. 2007 “Human Rights, Population Health, Trade and Aid” and “World Poverty and Individual Freedom,” invited lectures, department of philosophy, Carnegie Mellon University, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

136. 2007 “Shrinking Distance,” invited lecture, department of philosophy, John Hopkins/Georgetown University, Washington, D. C.

137. 2007 “Conserving Nature, Preserving Identity,” with David Wong, invited lecture, Conference on the Indigenous Knowledge and Cultural Property: The Ethics of Cultural and Environmental Sovereignty and Stewardship, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona

138. 2007 “Global Justice in a Globalizing World,” invited lecture, department of philosophy, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada

139. 2007 “World Poverty and Individual Freedom,” invited lecture, department of philosophy, University of North Florida, Jacksonville, Florida

140. 2007 “Making Free Trade Fair: Global Justice and Climate Change,” invited lecture, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado

141. 2006 “Evaluating the Impact of the International Financial Institutions: Growth, Inequality, and World Poverty,” Ethics and Africa Conference, Cape Town, South Africa

142. 2006 “Needs and Autonomy,” invited lecture, department of philosophy, Kwazulu-Natal University, Durban, South Africa

143. 2006 “World Poverty and Individual Freedom,” Pacific Division APA, Portland, Oregon (see prizes)

144. 2006 Invited Commentator on the Symposium on Globalization, Trade, and the Poor, Pacific Division APA, Portland, Oregon

145. 2006 Invited Commentator on “The Impossibility of Pornographic Art,” Pacific Division APA Special Session Arranged by the American Society for Aesthetics, Portland, Oregon

146. 2006 “Legitimacy, Autonomy, and Basic Needs,” invited Presentation, department of philosophy, University of Northern Arizona, Flagstaff, Arizona

147. 2006 “Autonomy and Needs,” University of Arizona Colloquium Series, Tucson, Arizona148. 2006 “World Poverty and Individual Freedom,” Loyola Graduate Student Conference in Philosophy,

Chicago, Illinois149. 2005 “The Moral Permissibility of Infanticide,” with Uriah Kreigal, and “Global Justice in a

Globalizing World,” The 32nd Conference on Value Inquiry, Baton Rouge, Louisiana150. 2005 “Hobbes’ Rationality Theory of Conflict,” Pacific Division APA Special Session arranged by

the International Hobbes Association, San Francisco, California 151. 2005 “The Case for Renewable Energy,” International Conference on Environmental, Cultural,

Economic and Social Sustainability, Oahu, Hawaii

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152. 2005 “The Transformative Value of Nature,” invited lecture, Colorado College, Colorado Springs, Colorado

153. 2005 “Wildness and Aesthetic Appreciation,” University of Arizona Colloquium Series, Tucson, Arizona

154. 2004 “Aesthetic Appreciation of the Environment,” American Society for Aesthetics Pacific Division Conference, Asilomar, California

155. 2004 “Paradox and the Fictional Philosophical Composition,” Society for Exact Philosophy, Vancouver, Washington

156. 2004 Commentary on “Dworkin’s Theory of Justified Paternalism” by Mark Engleson at The Second Annual Mardi Gras Symposium on Theoretical and Applied Ethics, Baton Rouge, Louisiana

Global Health Impact Project: Project site launched January 23, 2015 in Geneva (with a World Health Organization event) at:

global-health-impact.org and has been the subject of some press from National Public Radio, The Wall Street Journal’s Pharmalot, and Capital New York amongst other places.

Methodology for Calculating Treatment Impact Using Mortality Data (with Aidan Hollis), background paper for Consultation Meeting to Review and Improve Global Fund methods to Estimate Health Impact of the Supported Programs, Global Fund, Geneva, Switzerland, 10 July 2014 (for relevant publications and presentations see below).

“Measuring Global Health Impact: Increasing Access to Essential Medicines,” contribution to the United Nations’ Secretary General’s High Level Panel on Access to Medicines: http://www.unsgaccessmeds.org/list-of-contribution/

2018 Lois B. DeFleur Prize for Academic Achievement ($10,000) 2016 Closing Knowledge Gaps to Improve the Prevention and Treatment of Infectious Disease:

Increasing Global Health Impact Workshop organized in conjunction with the O’Neill Institute for National and Global Health Law, Georgetown University

2014 Human Rights and Global Health: Increasing Impact Conference organized in conjunction with Universities Allied for Essential Medicines https://www.facebook.com/events/1564142837168310/

2015-2019 Dean’s award to support the Global Health Impact project ($15,000) 2018-2019 Interdisciplinary Collaboration Grants Program ($10,000)

2017-2018  Poverty and Inequality Transdisciplinary Working Group (PI-TWG) grant ($3,000) 2013-2014 Citizenship, Rights, and Cultural Belonging Grant - Human Security in Africa: Aids,

Malaria, Tuberculosis and Conflict with Seden Akcinaroglu ($10,000) 2011 - “Global Health Impact: Extending Access on Essential Medicines,” one of four North

American Academics Stand Against Poverty Proposals (http://academicsstand.org/projects/global-health-impact-project/impact/)

2011-2012 Berkman Grant ($8,000) 2011-2013 Falk Grant ($4,000)

Demographics in Philosophy Project: Project launched at the Northwest Philosophy Conference, 2016 with a paper presentation of “New

Data on Women in Philosophy” (with Sherri Conklin) here: women-in-philosophy.org.

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Featured on Science Magazine and publicized on the American Philosophical Association Blog and elsewhere.

2018 “Women and Philosophy: JSTOR Data on Publishing Trends 1800-2010,” special session organized at the Pacific Division American Philosophical Association, San Diego, California, see: Tell Us How to Fix the Lack of Diversity in Philosophy Journals

Other Honors, Grants, and Institutes: 2017-2018 Happiness & Wellbeing; Integrating Research Across the Disciplines Grant

http://www.happinessandwellbeing.org/ ($44,000) 2014 Brocher Summer Academy in the Ethics of Global Population Health 2014: Ethical Choices for

DALYs and the Measurement of the Global Burden of Disease, Geneva, Switzerland 2008-2010 Falk Grant ($4,000)

2006-2007 American Association of University Women Dissertation Fellowship ($20,000)o One of about forty national fellowships awarded for the final year of dissertation work

2006 Pacific Division APA Outstanding Paper Prize (see professional presentations) 2006 Fink Prize for Best Overall Performance in the Graduate Program, University of Arizona

2006 University of Chapel Hill Philosophy Department Research Grant 2006 National Science Foundation Travel Grant

2005 Earhart Foundation Fellowshipo Research fellowship for one semester

2005-2006 University of Arizona Graduate College Fellowship 2005-2006 University of Arizona Graduate College Student Travel Grants

2003-2006 University of Arizona Philosophy Department Graduate Student Travel Grants 2006 Vienna International Summer University in Philosophy and Economics, Vienna, Austria

2005 Summer Seminar on Globalization, Institute for Humane Studies, Denver, Colorado 2004 The Summer Institute on Bounded Rationality, Berlin, Germany

2004 Erasmus Summer Institute on Environmental Ethics, Portland, Oregon (see presentations) 2001 University of Arizona Philosophy Department Graduate Student Grant

Courses: PHIL 147: Markets, Ethics, and Law, fall 2015, fall 2014, and fall 2012, Binghamton University Global Health Impact, spring 2015, Binghamton University

PHIL 580A: Health Justice, spring 2013, Binghamton University PHIL 608H: Global Justice, fall 2012, Binghamton University

Philosophy 80-244: Environmental Ethics, spring 2011 and fall 2008, Carnegie Mellon University Philosophy 80-136: Social Structure, Public Policy & Ethical Dilemmas, spring 2011, fall 2008, and

fall 2007, Carnegie Mellon University Philosophy 80-235 Political Philosophy, fall 2010 and fall 2011, Carnegie Mellon University

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Philosophy 80-247 Health, Development and Human Rights, fall 2010 and spring 2009 (co-taught with Alex London), Carnegie Mellon University

ETHICSOC 185: Contemporary Moral Problems, spring 2009, Stanford University Philosophy 80-247: Ethics and Global Economics, fall 2009 and fall 2011, Carnegie Mellon

University Philosophy 30: Applied Ethics, spring 2005, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill

Philosophy 39: Business Ethics, fall 2005, University of North Carolina Chapel Hill Philosophy 322: Business Ethics, fall 2004 and spring 2004, University of Arizona

Philosophy 323: Environmental Ethics, summer 2004 and summer 2003, University of Arizona Philosophy 101: Critical Thinking, fall 2003 and winter 2002, University of Arizona

Introduction to Philosophy of Mind (assisted), spring 2003, University of Arizona Introduction to Ethics, fall 2002 (assisted), University of Arizona

Introduction to Social and Political Philosophy (assisted), spring 2001, University of Arizona Introduction to Philosophy of Science, fall 2001 (assisted), University of Arizona

Other Professional Activities: 2018 - American Philosophical Association Committee on the Status of Women

2015 - Academics Stand Against Poverty Global Colleagues Mentor 2014 - Board of Editorial Consultants for Public Affairs Quarterly

2014 - Editorial Board Member Philosophy and Poverty book series http://www.philosophyandpoverty.org/

2013-2016 Director of Graduate Studies Binghamton University 2005 Associate Editor for the premiere issue of the International Journal of Environmental, Cultural,

Economic and Social Sustainability 2005 Consultant, Sustain Hawaii

2004 Researcher, Philippines Community Organizers Society, Philippines 2005 Graduate Student Representative to the Faculty, University of Arizona

Journals, presses, and blogs for which I have reviewed: Ethics; Pacific Philosophical Quarterly; American Political Science Review; Philosophical Studies; Economics and Philosophy; Medical Decision Making Policy and Practice; Journal of Moral Philosophy; Canadian Journal of Philosophy; International Journal of Health Policy and Management; American Philosophical Quarterly; Philosophy, Politics, and Economics; Ethics, Policy & Environment, Moral Philosophy and Politics, Journal of Medical Ethics; Ethics and International Affairs; Journal of Social Philosophy; Ethical Theory and Practice; Political Studies; Developing World Bioethics; Public Affairs Quarterly; Canadian Journal of Political Science; Synthese; Journal of Value Inquiry; Cambridge University Press; Edinburgh University Press; Acumen Press; Blackwell Press; Rowman & Littlefield Publishers; Academia-Bruylant; Routledge Press; Public Reason; Oxford University Press

Public lectures: Carnegie Mellon’s International Festival: Global Exchange: Trade, Rights & Welfare in a New World Economy, Center for the Advancement of Applied Ethics and Political Philosophy and the Humanities Center lecture series "Global Connections, Global Responsibilities," Binghamton

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University Global Healthcare Management and Policy Conference, and Lakewood Colorado’s Rotary International

Volunteer work: Bay Islands Conservation Association (Honduras), La Esperanza, (Nicaragua), IFC Homeless Shelter (North Carolina), The Oasis Center (Arizona), and Boulder County Homeless Shelter (Colorado)

Professional associations with which I have been affiliated: The American Philosophical Association, American Political Science Association, American Section of the International Association for Philosophy of Law and Social Philosophy, North American Society for Social Philosophy, Aristotelian Society, The Nordic Society for Aesthetics, and International Studies Association.

Select papers available at: http://harvey.binghamton.edu/~nhassoun/