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[[Category:Illinois Institute of Technology faculty|Davis, Michael]]
[[Category:Illinois Institute of Technology faculty|Davis, Michael]]



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Revision as of 21:05, 30 May 2007

Michael Davis (born 6 February 1943 in Canton, Ohio) is a philosopher of law, ethics, and political philosophy, author, and Professor of Philosophy, at the Illinois Institute of Technology. Before coming to IIT in 1986, he taught at the University of Illinois at Chicago, at Illinois State, and at Case Western Reserve.

Davis is perhaps best known among philosophers for his position in the theory of criminal justice, which can be seen as a form of retributive justice. But his work in engineering ethics has won him four large grants from the National Science Foundation and an entry in Who's Who in Science and Engineering. His papers on whistleblowing, conflict of interest, and professions are often reprinted.

Michael Davis is the author of six books and more than a 150 articles and chapters, and editor (or co-editor) of five other books. He received his Ph.D. from the University of Michigan in 1972, married Deborah Jones in 1977, and became the father of Alexander Davis-Jones in 1984.

Bibliography

  • Ethics and the Legal Profession (with Frederick Elliston) (1986)
  • To Make the Punishment Fit the Crime (1992)
  • AIDS: Crisis in Professional Ethics (with Elliot Cohen). (1994)
  • Accountability in the Professions (1995)
  • Justice in the Shadow of Death: Rethinking Capital and Lesser Punishments (1996)
  • Thinking like an Engineer (1998)
  • Ethics and the University (1999)
  • Conflict of Interest in the Professions (with Andrew Stark) (2001)
  • Profession, Code, and Ethics (2002)
  • Actual Social Contract and Political Obligation (2002)
  • Engineering Ethics (2005)

External link