| 1 | <i>Justice Across Ages: Treating Young and Old as Equals</i>, by Juliana Uhuru Bidadanure | 0.7 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 2 | Returning to Hobbes: Reflections on Political Philosophy | 0.4 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 3 | Respecting, protecting and fulfilling the human right to health | 3.2 | 41 | Citations (PDF) |
| 4 | Placebo use and unblinding in COVID-19 vaccine trials: recommendations of a WHO Expert Working Group | 33.0 | 10 | Citations (PDF) |
| 5 | Fighting risk with risk: solar radiation management, regulatory drift, and minimal justice | 0.8 | 5 | Citations (PDF) |
| 6 | I—The Presidential AddressEquality and Hierarchy | 0.4 | 11 | Citations (PDF) |
| 7 | Poverty | 1.4 | 5 | Citations (PDF) |
| 8 | How Propaganda Works | 0.5 | 1 | Citations (PDF) |
| 9 | Political Philosophy and the Real World of the Welfare State | 0.5 | 19 | Citations (PDF) |
| 10 | Paying People to Act in Their Own Interests: Incentives versus Rationalization in Public Health | 1.4 | 10 | Citations (PDF) |
| 11 | Are people consistent when trading time for health? | 1.7 | 4 | Citations (PDF) |
| 12 | Reconciling cost-effectiveness with the rule of rescue: the institutional division of moral labour | 0.4 | 30 | Citations (PDF) |
| 13 | On Fertile Functionings: A Response to Martha Nussbaum | 1.4 | 55 | Citations (PDF) |
| 14 | I—Jonathan Wolff: The Demands of the Human Right to Health | 0.9 | 60 | Citations (PDF) |
| 15 | EVALUATING INTERVENTIONS IN HEALTH: A RECONCILIATORY APPROACH | 1.6 | 13 | Citations (PDF) |
| 16 | The Moral Problem of Risk Impositions: A Survey of the Literature | 0.5 | 86 | Citations (PDF) |
| 17 | How should governments respond to the social determinants of health? | 2.8 | 4 | Citations (PDF) |
| 18 | Public health, genomics and autonomy * Comment on Dr R.L. Zimmern's Genomics and individuals in public health practice: are we luddites or can we meet the challenge? | 2.0 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 19 | Fairness, Respect and the Egalitarian Ethos Revisited | 0.5 | 75 | Citations (PDF) |
| 20 | The Social Gradient in Health: How Fair Retirement could make a Difference | 1.4 | 9 | Citations (PDF) |
| 21 | Five Types of Risky Situation | 1.3 | 24 | Citations (PDF) |
| 22 | COGNITIVE DISABILITY IN A SOCIETY OF EQUALS | 0.3 | 19 | Citations (PDF) |
| 23 | Managing the health effects of climate change | 62.2 | 2,656 | Citations (PDF) |
| 24 | Disadvantage, Risk and the Social Determinants of Health | 1.4 | 42 | Citations (PDF) |
| 25 | Harm and hypocrisy | 0.0 | 8 | Citations (PDF) |
| 26 | Training, Perfectionism and Fairness | 0.5 | 12 | Citations (PDF) |
| 27 | Scanlon on Well-Being | 0.5 | 2 | Citations (PDF) |
| 28 | A general framework for resolving disputed land claims | 0.5 | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 29 | Contractualism and the virtues | 0.8 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 30 | Addressing Disadvantage and the Human Good | 0.5 | 50 | Citations (PDF) |
| 31 | Title is missing! | 0.5 | 33 | Citations (PDF) |
| 32 | Fairness, Respect, and the Egalitarian Ethos | 0.9 | 468 | Citations (PDF) |
| 33 | The Problem of Ideology | 0.9 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 34 | POLITICAL OBLIGATION, FAIRNESS, AND INDEPENDENCE | 0.5 | 19 | Citations (PDF) |
| 35 | Pluralistic models of political obligation | 0.0 | 7 | Citations (PDF) |
| 36 | Hobbes and the motivations of social contract theory | 0.4 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 37 | Democratic Voting and the Mixed-Motivation Problem | 0.5 | 1 | Citations (PDF) |
| 38 | Contemporary Political Philosophy: An Introduction | 0.2 | 1 | Citations (PDF) |
| 39 | Not Bargaining for the Welfare State | 0.5 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 40 | IX—What is the Problem of Political Obligation? | 0.4 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 41 | MORALITY FOR ARCHANGELS | 0.2 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 42 | The philosophers have only interpreted the world | 0.2 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |