2021
- Book Forum on Smart Cities in Canada: Digital Dreams, Corporate Designs (Valverde & Flynn eds., 2020) [2021 C4eJ 9] (feat. Mariana Valverde & Alexandra Flynn (editors); Beth Coleman, Renee Sieber, & David Murakami Wood (commentators); Jamie Duncan (moderator))
2020
- Suzanne van Geuns, The History of Seduction from the Enlightenment to #MeToo [2020 C4eJ 6] (reviewing Clement Knox, Seduction: A History from the Enlightenment to the Present, New York: Pegasus Books, 2020)

Symposium: Sophia Moreau, Faces of Inequality: A Theory of Wrongful Discrimination (2020)
- Deborah Hellman, Moreau’s Pluralism about Discrimination (Book Forum) [2020 C4eJ 29]
- Niko Kolodny, Discrimination, Subordination, and Pluralism (Book Forum) [2020 C4eJ 30]
- Seana Shiffrin, Burdens on Deliberative Freedom (Book Forum) [2020 C4eJ 31]
- Kasper Lippert-Rasmussen, Moreau on Discrimination: Pluralism, Equality, and the Experience of Discrimination (Book Forum) [2020 C4eJ 32]
- Rebecca Cook, The Importance of a Pluralist Account of Discrimination (Book Forum) [2020 C4eJ 33]
- Sophia Moreau, Discrimination, Subordination, and Deliberative Freedom: A Reply to Critics (Book Forum) [2020 C4eJ 34]

2019
- Michael Kearns, The Ethical Algorithm [2019 C4eJ 2] (discussing The Ethical Algorithm: The Science of Socially Aware Algorithm Design (with Aaron Roth), Oxford University Press, 2019)

- Robert Vipond, What Does it Take to be “Truly One of Us”? [2019 C4eJ 21] (discussing Making a Global City: How One Toronto School Embraced Diversity, University of Toronto Press, 2017)
- Jennifer Morton, The Ethical Costs of Upward Mobility [2019 C4eJ 22] (discussing The Ethical Costs of Upward Mobility, Princeton University Press, 2019)
- Virginia Eubanks, Automating Inequality: How High-Tech Tools Profile, Police and Punish the Poor [2019 C4eJ 23] (discussing Automating Inequality: How High-Tech Tools Profile, Police and Punish the Poor, New York: St. Martin’s Press, 2018)

Symposium: Mark Kingwell, Wish I Were Here: Boredom and the Interface (2019)
- Book Forum on Mark Kingwell’s Wish I Were Here: Boredom and the Interface [2019 C4eJ 28] (full video)
- Lauren Bialystok, Randomness, Mindfulness, and the Games People Play [2019 C4eJ 29]
- Ira Wells, “To Be Unborable”: A Response to Mark Kingwell’s Wish I Were Here: Boredom and the Interface [2019 C4eJ 30]
- Mark Kingwell, A Response to Comments on Wish I Were Here: Boredom and the Interface [2019 C4eJ 31]
- Mark Kingwell, Author’s Introduction to Book Forum on Wish I Were Here: Boredom and the Interface [2019 C4eJ 32]

2018
Symposium: Mara Marin, Connected by Commitment: Oppression and Our Responsibility to Undermine It (2017)
- Shannon Dea: “Social Metaphysics and Normativity in Mara Marin’s Connected by Commitment,” 2018 C4eJ 1
- Meredith Schwartz: “Connected by Commitment: With Whom? For How Long?,” 2018 C4eJ 2
- Torrey Shanks: “The Rhetoric of Contract and Commitment,” 2018 C4eJ 3
- Kerry Rittich: “Mara Marin’s Connected by Commitment: Reflections in Aid of a Collective Project,” 2018 C4eJ 4
- Mara Marin: “The Diverse Uses of the Metaphor of Commitment in Connected by Commitment: Bonds of Love, Labor and Collective Action,” 2018 C4eJ 5

Symposium: Richard Moon, Putting Faith in Hate: When Religion Is the Source or Target of Hate Speech (2018)
- Mohammad Fadel: “A Liberal Justification for Narrowing the Public Interest Defense to Hate Speech,” 2018 C4eJ 6
- Richard Moon: “Can Hate Speech Sometimes Be True or in the Public Interest?,” 2018 C4eJ 7

Symposium: Abraham Rotstein, Myth, Mind and Religion: The Apocalyptic Narrative (2017)
- Igor Shoikhedbrod: “Slave Morality Revalued and Sublated,” 2018 C4eJ 8
- Stephen Bede Scharper: “Utopias and Other Myths: A Precautionary Tale,” 2018 C4eJ 9
- Ronald Beiner: “Rotstein (and Freud) versus Levi-Strauss (and Weber),” 2018 C4eJ 10
- Clifford Orwin: “Exodus, la Mythologique vs. the Apocalyptic, and Modernity’s Long Apocalyptic Lacuna: Three Questions for Abraham Rotstein’s Myth, Mind, and Religion,” 2018 C4eJ 11
Symposium: Leo Zaibert, Rethinking Punishment (2018)
- Alejandro Chehtman (Law, Universidad Torcuato di Tella, Buenos Aires): “Rethinking Punishment and the (Uneasy) Relationship Between an Axiology of Punishment and Its Deontic Implications,” 2018 C4eJ 12
- Leora Dahan Katz (Van Leer Institute, Jerusalem): “Taking Pluralism Seriously: Rethinking Punishment Theory’s Monism,” 2018 C4eJ 13
- Margaret Martin (Law, University of Western Ontario, Canada): “Leo Zaibert’s Rethinking Punishment: An Illuminating Voyage,” 2018 C4eJ 14
- Stephen de Wijze (Politics, University of Manchester, UK): “Punishing ‘Dirty Hands’: Insights from Zaibert’s Rethinking Punishment,” 2018 C4eJ 15
- Sascha Ziemann (Law, Goethe-Universität Frankfurt, Germany): “When Crime Punishes Itself: Dispensing with Punishment, Punishment Theory, and Theodicy—A German Perspective,” 2018 C4eJ 16
- Leo Zaibert (Philosophy, Union College, USA): “Punishment, Values, and Justifications,” 2018 C4eJ 17

2017
- Emily Baxter, We Are All Criminals [2018 C4eJ 33] (discussing We Are All Criminals, 2017)

Symposium: James Forman, Locking Up Our Own: Crime and Punishment in Black America (2017) (Pulitzer Prize Winner)
- James Forman Jr., Locking Up Our Own: Crime and Punishment in Black America [2017 C4eJ 52] (Book Forum)
- Teddy Harrison: Response to James Forman [2017 C4eJ 53] (Book Forum)

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