Jordan Pascoe is an assistant professor of philosophy. Before coming to Binghamton in 2024, she was the George A. Miller Visiting Scholar at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and a professor of philosophy at Manhattan University. Pascoe is a feminist philosopher with interests in moral, social and political philosophy, philosophy of law, feminist epistemology, Kantian philosophy and philosophy of race. She is the author of Kant’s Theory of Labour (2022), which positioned Kant as an important theorist of work, and developed an intersectional methodology for reading Kant’s philosophy. She is also the co-author of The Epistemology of Disasters and Social Change: Pandemics, Protests, and Possibilities (2024), an interdisciplinary exploration of how disasters and other crises shape widespread social change. Her research explores feminist and Kantian philosophy, with publications that explore social movements and social change, domestic and caregiving labor, reproductive justice and the philosophy of sex, philosophy of law and the history of philosophy, philosophy of disasters and crises, and the philosophy of A.I. Her current book project examines the relationship between race and revolutionary resistance in Kantian political philosophy. Pascoe is the co-director of the Society for the Philosophy of Sex and Love, and is currently the chair for the American Philosophical Association’s Committee on Women and Gender. She is also associate editor of the Kantian Review. Select Publications
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