Ethics and Politics: H. A. Prichard (1949), Green's principles of political obligation; Charles H. Monson, Jr (1954), Prichard, Green and moral obligation; Peter P. Nicholson (1990), Green and the common good; Avital Simhony (1993), T. H. Green: the common good society. Liberty in Political Society: Avital Simhony (1991), On forcing individuals to be free: T. H. Green's liberal theory of positive freedom; Avital Simhony (1993), Beyond positive and negative freedom: T. H. Green's view of freedom; Maria Dimova-Cookson (2003), A new scheme of positive and negative freedom: reconstructing T. H. Green on freedom. Rights and Political Obligation: A. J. M. Milne (1986), The common good and rights in Green's ethical and political theory; Paul Harris (1986), Green's theory of political obligation and disobedience; Rex Martin (2001), T. H. Green on individual rights and the common good; Gerald F. Gaus (2005), Green's rights recognition thesis and moral internalism. The Rights of the State: H. D. Lewis (1962), The individualism of T. H. Green; Thom Brooks (2003), T. H. Green's theory of punishment; Phillip Hansen (1977), T. H. Green and the moralization of the market; John Morrow (1981), Property and personal development: an interpretation of T. H. Green's political philosophy; Crossley, David (2003), T. H. Green on property and moral responsibility. Green and Victorian Liberalism: Melvin Richter (1956), T. H. Green and his audience: liberalism as a surrogate faith; Peter Nicholson (1985), T. H. Green and state action: liquor legislation; Andrew Vincent (1986), T. H. Green and the religion of citizenship; Richard Bellamy (1990), T. H. Green and the morality of Victorian liberalism; Olive Anderson (1991), The feminism of T. H. Green: a late-Victorian success story?; Colin Tyler (2003), T. H. Green, advanced liberalism and the reform question 1865-1876. Green in the History of Political Thought: G. F. Barbour (1908), Green and Sidgwick on the community of the good; D. H. Monro (1950), Green, Rousseau, and the culture pattern; Peter Nicholson, T. H. Green's doubts about Hegel's political philosophy; David Weinstein (1993), Between Kantianism and consequentialism in T. H. Green's moral philosophy; Hirai Atsuko (1979), Self-realisation and common good: T. H. Green in Meiji ethical thought; Index.
John Morrow is Professor of Political Studies and Dean of Arts at The University of Auckland, New Zealand. He is co-editor of a critical edition of T. H. Green's political writings and author of studies on Coleridge's political ideas and the history of nineteenth-century English political thought.
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