Moral Constraints on War: Principles and CasesBruno Coppieters, N. Fotion Lexington Books, 2002 - 321 pages Moral Constraints on War offers a principle-by-principle presentation of the transcultural roots of the ethics of war in an age defined by the increasingly international nature of military intervention. Parts one and two trace the evolution of Just War theory, analyzing the principles of jus ad bellum and jus in bello: the principles that determine under what conditions a war may be started and then conducted. Each chapter provides the historical background of the principle under discussion, an explanation of the principle, and numerous historical examples of its application. In Part three, case studies apply the theories discussed to the Gulf War, the 1994 Russian intervention in Chechnya, NATO's humanitarian mission in Kosovo, and the U.S. military's actions in Afghanistan in the wake of the World Trade Center attacks. Bringing together an international coterie of philosophers and political scientists this accessible and practical guide offers students of military ethics, international law, and social conflict rich, up-to-the-minute insight into the pluralistic character of Just War Theory. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 58
Page xv
... further criticized Russia's indiscriminate attack on the civilian population . As we will show in this volume , such criticism pertains to the application of classic principles of Just War Theory . These two cases will be discussed in ...
... further criticized Russia's indiscriminate attack on the civilian population . As we will show in this volume , such criticism pertains to the application of classic principles of Just War Theory . These two cases will be discussed in ...
Page xvi
... financing the project , including the Russian and Chinese editions of this book , which are published in parallel to the English volume . Further support has been received from the Fund xvi Bruno Coppieters and Nick Fotion.
... financing the project , including the Russian and Chinese editions of this book , which are published in parallel to the English volume . Further support has been received from the Fund xvi Bruno Coppieters and Nick Fotion.
Page xvii
Principles and Cases Bruno Coppieters, N. Fotion. volume . Further support has been received from the Fund for Scientific Research — Flanders ( Belgium ) , the United States Military Academy at West Point , NATO , the Institute of ...
Principles and Cases Bruno Coppieters, N. Fotion. volume . Further support has been received from the Fund for Scientific Research — Flanders ( Belgium ) , the United States Military Academy at West Point , NATO , the Institute of ...
Page 2
... further , if there are few if any political costs to attacking , then there is no reason not to attack . Indeed it would be foolish not to . On such a self - interest account , the world stage on which nations move is a jungle , not the ...
... further , if there are few if any political costs to attacking , then there is no reason not to attack . Indeed it would be foolish not to . On such a self - interest account , the world stage on which nations move is a jungle , not the ...
Page 8
... further " ) played a role as well . This narrow use of the term Pacifism is not appropriate to our purposes . We try to describe basic ethical attitudes toward problems of war and peace . In the following , we will therefore concentrate ...
... further " ) played a role as well . This narrow use of the term Pacifism is not appropriate to our purposes . We try to describe basic ethical attitudes toward problems of war and peace . In the following , we will therefore concentrate ...
Contents
Jus and Bellum | 25 |
Legitimate Authority | 41 |
Right Intentions | 59 |
Likelihood of Success | 79 |
Proportionality | 91 |
Last Resort | 101 |
Jus in Bello | 129 |
Discrimination | 141 |
The First Chechen War 19941996 | 177 |
The NATO Intervention in the Kosovo Crisis MarchJune 1999 | 205 |
NATOs Intervention in the Kosovo Crisis Whose Justice? | 229 |
After Kosovo Moral and Legal Constraints on Humanitarian Intervention | 247 |
The Military Response of the USLed Coalition to the September 11 Attacks | 265 |
Concluding Comments | 293 |
309 | |
About the Contributors | 319 |
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Common terms and phrases
Afghanistan aggression air campaign al-Qaeda Albanian Albanian Kosovars allies armed army attack bombing Bosnian Serbs Bruno Coppieters casualties cause Chechen Chechnya civilian claim combat concerning conflict considered countries crisis Cuba decision declared defense diplomatic Dudayev ethics Federation fighting France French German guerrilla human rights humanitarian intervention international community international law Iraq Iraqi jus ad bellum jus in bello justice justified killed Kosovars Kosovo Kuwait land mines Last Resort leadership Legitimate Authority Likelihood of Success means military actions military force moral Moscow NATO NATO's negotiations noncombatants Operation Enduring Freedom Pakistan peace percent policies political population Principle of Discrimination Principle of Legitimate Principle of Proportionality realists reason Republic resistance Resolution response Right Intentions Russian sanctions secession secessionist Security Council self-defense Serbia sovereignty Soviet Union Taliban Taliban regime targets territory terrorist Theory threat tion tional troops UN Security Council United Nations University Press violations Walzer wars World Yugoslav Yugoslavia
Popular passages
Page 4 - You cannot qualify war in harsher terms than I wilL War is cruelty, and you cannot refine it: and those who brought war into our Country deserve all the curses and maledictions a people can pour out. I know I had no hand in making this war, and I know I will make more sacrifices today than any of you to Secure Peace. But you cannot have Peace and a Division of our Country.
Page 5 - You might as well appeal against the thunder-storm as against these terrible hardships of war. They are inevitable, and the only way the people of Atlanta can hope once more to live in peace and quiet at home, is to stop the war, which can only be done by admitting that it began in error and is perpetuated in pride.
Page 2 - In international society all forms of coercion are permissible, including wars of destruction. This means that the struggle for power is identical with the struggle for survival, and the improvement of the relative power position becomes the primary objective of the internal and the external policy of states.
References to this book
In War We Trust: The Bush Doctrine and the Pursuit of Just War Chris J. Dolan No preview available - 2005 |