Hoffberger Center Hosts First-Ever International Conference: "Legitimate Decision-Making in Times of Crisis"
On Feb. 5, 2021, the Hoffberger Center for Professional Ethics hosted its first-ever virtual international conference on legitimate decision-making in times of crisis. The event featured presentations from philosophers and social scientists from around the globe.
CONFERENCE SPONSORS
- Hoffberger Center for Professional Ethics
- Center for International and Comparative Law
- Philosophy, Law, and Ethics program
- School of Public and International Affairs
About the Conference
A world pandemic has shined a spotlight on the nature and practice of legitimate decision-making in times of crisis. Crises create novel circumstances that may preclude the use of normal democratic structures, where the structures themselves do not settle who or how decision-making should proceed. Or democratic procedures may include escape clauses for truncated decision-making procedures in ways that are unclear and ill-defined, and may raise questions of legitimacy themselves. Some specific domains, such as triage in times of war, have a long history of addressing crises; but Covid-19 highlights the broader topic of legitimacy when political units as a whole, such as nation-states, experience significant procedural stress or breakdown in the face of crises. The relative balance of global, national, regional, and local decision-making can quickly become scrambled.
This virtual conference invites philosophers and social scientists to address a feature of legitimate decision-making in times of crisis. How do and should crises alter the notion of legitimate decision-making, if at all? Another set of questions revolve around who should make decisions and over what matters. A third set of questions revolve around the best form of legitimate or ethical decision-making, given who should decide. For example, is cost-benefit analysis the best method for decision-makers for closing or re-opening schools and Universities, or businesses? Papers may address these or other related questions theoretically (as topics in political legitimacy and applied ethics) or as case studies with answers in practice (in law and social science).
Conference agenda
VIEW THE PRESENTATION SUMMARIES
8:30-9 a.m. |
Opening Morning Ceremonies
Joshua Kassner
Christine Spencer
Kurt Schmoke
|
9-10 a.m. |
Keynote Address
Introduction
Keynote Speaker
|
10 a.m.-noon |
Legitimate Decision-Making I
Panel Chair
Presenters
Veronique Champeil-Desplats
Santiago Mejia
|
noon-12:30 p.m. |
lunch and breakout discussions |
12:30-1 p.m. |
Opening Afternoon Ceremonies
Roger Hartley
Catherine Andersen |
1-2 p.m. |
Keynote Address
Keynote Speaker
Commentator
|
2-4 p.m. |
Legitimate Decision-Making II
Panel Chair
Presenters
Christopher Morris
William Tullius
|
4-4:15 p.m. |
Closing Remarks
Joshua Kassner
Ivan Sascha Sheehan
Steven Scalet
|
Conference Organizers