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E-raamat: Walzer, Just War and Iraq: Ethics as Response

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Interventions
  • Ilmumisaeg: 08-Oct-2015
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317382430
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Sari: Interventions
  • Ilmumisaeg: 08-Oct-2015
  • Kirjastus: Routledge
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781317382430

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In recent years questions of ethical responsibility and justice in war have become increasingly significant in international relations. This focus has been precipitated by United States (U.S.) led invasions in Afghanistan and Iraq. In turn, Western conceptions of ethical responsibility have been largely informed by human rights based understandings of morality.

This book directly addresses the question of what it means to act ethically in times of war by drawing upon first-hand accounts of U.S. war fighting in Iraq during the 2003 invasion and occupation. The book focuses upon the prominent rights based justification of war of Michael Walzer. Through an in-depth critical reading of Walzer’s work, this title demonstrates the broader problems implicit to human rights based justifications of war and elucidates an alternative account of ethical responsibility:ethics as response.

Putting forward a compelling case for people to remain troubled and engaged with questions of ethical responsibility in war, this work will be of great interest to students and scholars in a range of areas including international relations theory, ethics and security studies.

List of abbreviations
xi
Acknowledgements xii
Introduction 1(19)
The Tower of Babel and the ideal of unity
1(3)
Michael Walzer and the just war tradition
4(3)
Deconstruction as methodology
7(2)
Historical analysis and the problem of representation
9(4)
With whom does the historical writer of historicism actually empathise?
13(4)
Structure of the book
17(1)
Conclusion
18(2)
1 Morality, community and the justification of war
20(26)
Introduction
20(2)
There is a thin man inside every fat man
22(2)
Self-determination and membership
24(4)
Declaration and the birth of community
28(4)
Membership and alterity
32(3)
War and maximal morality
35(3)
Temporal revelation and being
38(3)
Differance and secular theology
41(2)
Conclusion
43(3)
2 Violence, ethics and the invasion of Iraq
46(27)
A brief history of Iraq
46(2)
The pre-war imagining of justice in Iraq
48(6)
Occupation and legal authority
54(4)
Post-war security
58(2)
De-Ba 'athification and Sunni resistance
60(3)
Religious authority and the Iraqi constitution
63(4)
The 2005 election and ethno-sectarian violence
67(2)
Conclusion
69(4)
3 Derrida and ethics
73(28)
Introduction
73(1)
Ethics as first philosophy
74(7)
Community as the possibility of justice
81(6)
Ethical action as sacrifice
87(6)
Undecidability as justice for the other
93(6)
Conclusion
99(2)
4 Non-combatant immunity and the sacrifice of rights
101(24)
Introduction
101(2)
Identifying the target
103(2)
Combatant rights
105(4)
Justifying the loss of rights
109(10)
Simply by fighting
110(3)
Danger and threat
113(6)
Freedom and sacrifice
119(3)
Conclusion
122(3)
5 Double effect and its parasites
125(25)
Introduction
125(1)
The doctrine of double effect
126(2)
Pardon me for not meaning to . . .
128(5)
In all good faith
133(3)
Policing with due care
136(4)
Deepening double effect
140(6)
Siege warfare: an illustrative example
142(4)
Conclusion: ethics as double effect
146(4)
Conclusion: Ethics as response
150(8)
What the hell is water?
150(3)
Shattering Sisyphus
153(2)
Responding to Iraqis
155(3)
Bibliography 158(7)
Index 165
Ronan OCallaghan has recently completed his PhD in Politics at the University of Manchester. He is currently a Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Central Lancashire.