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Weighing lives in war / ed. by Jens David Ohlin, Larry May and Claire Finkelstein

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Document type:
Book
Subtype of document:
Recueil
Title:
Weighing lives in war
Author zone:
ed. by Jens David Ohlin, Larry May and Claire Finkelstein
Editor:
Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2017
Physical description:
VI, 327 p. : diagr., ill., ; 25 cm
Series:
Ethics, national security, and the rule of law
ISBN:
978-0-19-879618-3
Languages:
English
General Note:
Index
Abstract:
This volume combines philosophical analysis with normative legal theory. Although both disciplines have spent the past fifty years investigating the nature of the principles of necessity and proportionality, these discussions were all too often walled off from each other. However, the boundaries of these disciplinary conversations have recently broken down, and this volume continues the cross-disciplinary effort by bringing together philosophers concerned with the real-world military implications of their theories and legal scholars who frequently build doctrinal arguments from first principles, many of which herald from the historical just war tradition or from the contemporary just war literature. What unites the chapters into a singular conversation is their common skepticism regarding whether the traditional doctrines, in both law and philosophy, have correctly valued the lives of civilians and combatants at war. The arguments outlined in this volume reveal a set of principles, including necessity and proportionality, whose core essence remains essentially contested. What does military necessity mean and are soldiers always subject to lethal force? What is proportionality and how should military commanders attach a value to a military target and weigh it against collateral damage? Do these valuations remain the same for both sides of the conflict? From the secure viewpoint of the purely descriptive, lawyers might confidently describe some of these questions as settled. But many others, even from the vantage point of descriptive theory, remain under-analyzed and radically lacking in clarity and certainty.
Links:
  • Full text (restricted access : ICRC)
Authors:
Ohlin, Jens David (editor)
May, Larry (editor)
Finkelstein, Claire (editor)
Keyword in English:
IHL (INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW)
COMBATANT
PRINCIPLE OF PROPORTIONALITY
MILITARY NECESSITY
CIVILIAN
JUS AD BELLUM
Keyword in French:
DIH
COMBATTANT
PRINCIPE DE PROPORTIONNALITE
NECESSITE MILITAIRE
CIVIL
JUS AD BELLUM
Go to:
  • 2017, Chapter, A theory of jus in bello proportionality / Adil Ahmad Haque
  • 2017, Chapter, Sharp wars are brief / Jens David Ohlin
  • 2017, Chapter, Rewriting the AUMF : bringing guidance to executive decisions on combatancy and returning the US to the path of the war convention / Jon Todd
  • 2017, Chapter, Proportionate killing : using traditional jus in bello conditions to model the relationship between liability and lesser-evil justifications for killing in war / Jovana Davidovic
  • 2017, Chapter, Proportionate defense / Jeff McMahan
  • 2017, Chapter, Proportionality in warfare as a political norm / Ariel Colonomos
  • 2017, Chapter, Joint and combined targeting : structure and process / Michael Schmitt... [et al.]
  • 2017, Chapter, Humanity, necessity, and the rights of soldiers / Larry May
  • 2017, Chapter, The equality of combatants in asymmetric war / Claire Finkelstein
  • 2017, Chapter, The dispensable lives of soldiers / Gabriella Blum
  • 2017, Chapter, The deaths of combatants : superfluous injury and unnecessary suffering in contemporary warfare / Michael L. Gross
  • 2017, Chapter, Compensation and proportionality in war / Saba Bazargan-Forward
  • show more

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Call numberDisposability / Due date
345.25/361Available
WEBNot for loan
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