What to do with tainted monuments? This collection introduces the ethics of cultural heritage and shares recent philosophical answers to the question, including essays by two young Canadian scholars, Brenda Macdougall and Daniel Abrahams.
- The Ethics of Cultural Heritage, Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy (2018)
- Is It Wrong to Topple Statues and Rename Schools?, Joanna Burch-Brown, (2017)
- Naming and Renaming: Confronting Canada’s Past, Brenda Macdougall (2018)
- The Duty to Remove Statues of Wrongdoers, Helen Frowe (2019)
- Must Rhodes Fall? The Significance of Commemoration in the Struggle for Relations of Respect, Johannes Schulz (2019)
- The Importance of History to the Erasing History Defence, Daniel Abrahams (2020)
- Political Vandalism as Counter-Speech: A Defense of Defacing and Destroying Tainted Monuments, Ten-Herng Lai (2020)
- Vandalizing Tainted Commemorations, Chong-Ming Lim (2020)
- From Charlottesville to the Nobel: Political Leaders and the Morality of Political Honors, Shmuel Nili (2020)
- A Case for Removing Confederate Monuments, Travis Timmerman (2020)