Chatterjee, Deen K. & Scheid, Don E.; editors: - Ethics and Foreign InterventionCambridge, Cambridge University Press, (2003). orig.boards. 23x15cm, xiii,301 pp, Series: Cambridge Studies in Philosophy and Public Policy.. Minor rubbing. VG. ¶ Contains 13 papers. Includes: Part I: The Conceptual & Normative Terrain: Intervention: should it go on, can it go on? [Stanley Hoffmann]; Selective humanitarianism: in defense of inconsistency [Chris Brown]; Part II: Just- War Perspectives and Limits: Reciprocity, stability, and intervention: the ethics of disequilibrium [Michael Blake]; From jus ad bellum to jus ad pacem: re-thinking just-war criteria for the use of military force for humanitarian ends [George R. Lucas, Jr.]; Bombing to rescue?: NATO's 1999 bombing of Serbia [Henry Shue]; Burdens of collective liability [Erin Kelly]; part III: Secession and International Law: Ethics of intervention in self-determination struggles [Tom J. Farer]; Seccession, humanitarian intervetnion, and the normative significance of political boundaries [ Christine Chwaszcza]; Secession, state breakdown, and humanitarian intervention [Allen Buchanan]; Part IV: The Critique of Interventionism: Respectable oppressors, hypocritical liberators: morality, intervention, and reality [Richard W. Miller]; Violence against power: critical thoughts on military intervention [Iris Marion Young]; War for humanity: a critique [C.A.J. Coady]. ["This collection of original essays on the ethical and legal implications of humanitarian military intervention presents a variety of normative perspectives. It considers topics such as the just- war theory and its limits, secession and international law, and new approaches toward the moral adequacy of intervention..." - Publisher's description] USD 59.00 [Appr.: EURO 51.25 | £UK 44 | JP¥ 8680] Book number BOOKS012604Iis offered by:
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