Gary William Chartier (born 1966) is a legal scholar, philosopher, political theorist, and theologian.[1] His work addresses anarchism and ethics. Chartier is a professor and serves as associate dean of La Sierra University's business school.
After working as the editor of a newspaper in Temecula, California, Chartier enrolled at the UCLA School of Law, graduating with a J.D. in 2001. During his legal studies, he served as a lecturer in business ethics at La Sierra and began a full-time academic appointment there in September 2001.[2] In 2015, the University of Cambridge presented Chartier with an earned higher doctorate, an LLD,[4] in recognition of his work in legal theory.[5] He is currently Associate Dean and Distinguished Professor of Law and Business Ethics at La Sierra's Zapara School of Business.[3][6]
Chartier advocates for a variant of natural law thinking, which he has employed in discussions of anarchism, economic life,[7] and the moral status and claims of non-human animals. Other topics he has discussed include sexuality[8] and lying.[9]
Reviewing Anarchy and Legal Order in Common Knowledge, Peter Leeson described it as "intriguing" and classed it "among the most sophisticated ethical defenses of anarchy I have encountered."[10] In Anarchist Studies, Eric Roark wrote: "Gary Chartier's Anarchy and Legal Order offers nothing less than a tremendous contribution to contemporary libertarian and anarchist thought." Roark highlighted what he characterized as a "compelling and rich vision of anarchy forged by a just legal regime."[11] Edward Stringham characterized the book as "well written, thought provoking, and a welcome addition to the literature."[12]
Aeon Skoble of Bridgewater State University suggested in a Reason review that Chartier's "arguments [in the book] are laid out with such elegance and precision that any intelligent lay reader should be able to understand them." Skoble writes: "Anarchy and Legal Order is an impressive contribution to libertarian thought generally, and in particular to the ongoing debates on anarchism versus minarchism and on libertarianism's place vis-a-vis the left/right dichotomy. It's a must-read for those interested in political philosophy, and it may well challenge readers' long-held beliefs about the nature of government."[13] In a symposium in Studies in Emergent Order devoted to the book, Skoble added: "Chartier's argument demonstrates not only that natural law theory is compatible with spontaneous order theory, but also that what this confluence points to is a voluntary, polycentric legal order. The book is thus valuable not only for offering a robust defense of polycentrism, but for doing so in a way that ties together two important threads from the liberal tradition, natural law and spontaneous order, and in doing so, enhances our understanding of both."[14] Also writing in the symposium, Jason Brennan criticized Chartier's reliance on the controversial new natural law theory and objected to his embrace of the theory's view that basic aspects of well-being are incommensurable, a view Brennan suggested led to counterintuitive, implausible conclusions.[15][16] While expressing some concerns about the feasibility of Chartier's proposals, Paul Dragos Aligica concluded: "Anarchy and Legal Order is currently the book to read if one wants to explore the potential and limits of natural law, non-aggression maxim, praxeology based doctrines of stateless social order. Austrian scholars of all persuasions will benefit immensely from engaging with its arguments and the intellectual precedent it creates."[17]
The Analogy of Love received mixed reviews. In the course of a tepidly favorable assessment, Timothy Gorringe maintained that some passages disposed him to "reach for the whiskey bottle," though he also observed that the book did "not parade its erudition" and suggested that it was "consistently on the side of the angels."[20] Paul Ballard described Analogy as "extremely well informed and researched," as "comprehensive," and as "rich, sensitive and insightful." Ballard evaluated the book's "style of presentation" as "remarkably lucid and jargon free" and as "spare, simple, direct and logical, cutting to the heart of a discussion."[21] Mike Higton of the University of Durham observes that "Chartier draws on impressively wide reading in the modern secondary literature . . . ." While unconvinced by Chartier's depiction of God as a moral agent, and evidently doubtful about his greater reliance on contemporary than on biblical or classical sources, Higton suggests that "his insistence on coming back again and again to love is salutary, and the book as a whole issues a thought-provoking challenge to take love seriously in every domain of theology."[22]
Radicalizing Rawls: Global Justice and the Foundations of International Law. Philosophy, Public Policy, and Transnational Law 2. New York: Palgrave (2014) ISBN978-1137382900
Vulnerability and Community: Meditations on the Spiritual Life. Ann Arbor, MI: Griffin (2015) ISBN978-0692494127
Public Practice, Private Law: An Essay on Love, Marriage, and the State. New York: CUP (2016) ISBN978-1107140608
An Ecological Theory of Free Expression. New York: Palgrave (2018)ISBN978-3319752709
A Good Life in the Market: An Introduction to Business Ethics. Great Barrington, MA: American Institute for Economic Research (2019) ISBN978-1630691691
Flourishing Lives: Exploring Natural Law Liberalism. New York: CUP (2019) ISBN978-1108493048
The Idea of an Adventist University. New York: Griffin (2020) ISBN978-0578741826
Understanding Friendship: On the Moral, Political, and Spiritual Meaning of Love. Minneapolis: Fortress (2022) ISBN978-1506479088
Loving Creation: The Task of the Moral Life. Minneapolis: Fortress (2022) ISBN978-1506481043
Edited books
Chartier, Gary, and Johnson, Charles W., eds. Markets Not Capitalism: Individualist Anarchism against Bosses, Inequality, Corporate Power, and Structural Poverty. New York: Minor Compositions-Autonomedia (2011)ISBN978-1570272424. OCLC757148527
The Future of Adventism: Theology, Society, Experience. Ann Arbor, MI: Griffin (2015) ISBN978-0692520215
Hart, David M., Chartier, Gary, Kenyon, Ross Miller, and Long, Roderick T., eds. Social Class and State Power: Exploring an Alternative Radical Tradition. New York: Palgrave (2018) ISBN978-3319648934
Chartier, Gary, and Van Schoelandt, Chad, eds. The Routledge Handbook of Anarchy and Anarchist Thought. New York: Routledge (2020) ISBN978-1138737587
^See Gary Chartier, Economic Justice and Natural Law (Cambridge: CUP 2009). This book is principally an exercise in applied ethics, in which differences from other natural law views are more described than defended; it nonetheless addresses some more fundamental theoretical issues. These include the differences between natural law views and others regarding the character of practical reason and the limits of the arguments offered by other natural law theorists regarding the authority of the state.
^"Natural Law, Same-Sex Marriage, and the Politics of Virtue," UCLA Law Review 48.6 (Aug. 2001): 1593–1632.
^See "Toward a Consistent Natural Law Ethics of False Assertion," American Journal of Jurisprudence 51 (2006): 43–64; "Self-Integration as a Basic Good: A Response to Chris Tollefsen," American Journal of Jurisprudence 52 (2007: 293–296)
^Aeon J. Skoble, "Is Anarchism Socialist or Capitalist?," rev. of Anarchy and Legal Order: Law and Politics for a Stateless Society, by Gary Chartier, Reason (Reason Foundation, April 2013).