Abstract
Whistleblowing” has entered the scholarly and the public
debate as a way of describing the exposure by the member
of an organization of episodes of corruption, fraud, or general
abuses of power within the organization. We offer a
critical survey of the main normative theories of
whistleblowing in the current debate in political philosophy,
with the illustrative aid of one of the epitomic figures of a
whistleblower of our time: Edward Snowden. After conceptually
separating whistleblowing from other forms of
wrongdoing disclosures, we introduce and discuss two families
of normative views of this practice: the “Extrema Ratio”
and the “Deontic” views. We show how the two views can
be usefully considered in tandem to offer an all-round
assessment of the moral justification of whistleblowing
either as an extraordinary individual conscientious act of
indictment or as an ordinary dutiful organizational practice
of answerability that enables the capacity of self-correction
of an organization