Christopher J. Finlay claims “that a principle of moral or legitimate authority is necessary in just war theory for evaluating properly the justifiability of violence by non-state entities when they claim to act on behalf of the victims of rights violations and political injustice.” In particular, he argues that states, unlike non-state actors, possess what he calls “Lesser Moral Authority.” This authority allegedly enables states to invoke “the War Convention,” which in turn entitles even individual soldiers on the aggressive side to use military violence against soldiers defending the victim state. Non-state actors, in contrast, have to fulfill more stringent requirements. If they do not, then even their attacks on military personnel can ...
This article assesses whether the contemporary consensus of just war thinking to allow only for defe...
Under the influence of Jeff McMahan’s groundbreaking work, many recent writings in Just War theory h...
doctrine is true by definitional fiat; second, that combatants fighting for an unjust cause may, pac...
Christopher J. Finlay claims “that a principle of moral or legitimate authority is necessary in just...
Christopher J. Finlay claims “that a principle of moral or legitimate authority is necessary in just...
Recent attempts by political philosophers to determine if terrorism can be morally justified have an...
Despite a recent explosion of interest in the ethics of armed conflict, the traditional just war cri...
The just war-criterion of legitimate authority – as it is traditionally framed – restricts the right...
Despite a recent explosion of interest in the ethics of armed conflict, the traditional just war cri...
In this article, the author discusses philosophy teacher David Estlund\u27s belief that subjects of ...
In this brief comment, I want to argue, without making any definite judgments about the current situ...
This article challenges the tendency exhibited in arguments by Michael Ignatieff, Jeremy Waldron, an...
In War & Ethics, Nicholas Fotion undertakes three main tasks. The first is critical: to analyze ‘Jus...
Law and Morality at War offers a broadly instrumentalist defense of the authority of the laws of war...
Since its earliest incarnations, just war theory has included the requirement that war must be initi...
This article assesses whether the contemporary consensus of just war thinking to allow only for defe...
Under the influence of Jeff McMahan’s groundbreaking work, many recent writings in Just War theory h...
doctrine is true by definitional fiat; second, that combatants fighting for an unjust cause may, pac...
Christopher J. Finlay claims “that a principle of moral or legitimate authority is necessary in just...
Christopher J. Finlay claims “that a principle of moral or legitimate authority is necessary in just...
Recent attempts by political philosophers to determine if terrorism can be morally justified have an...
Despite a recent explosion of interest in the ethics of armed conflict, the traditional just war cri...
The just war-criterion of legitimate authority – as it is traditionally framed – restricts the right...
Despite a recent explosion of interest in the ethics of armed conflict, the traditional just war cri...
In this article, the author discusses philosophy teacher David Estlund\u27s belief that subjects of ...
In this brief comment, I want to argue, without making any definite judgments about the current situ...
This article challenges the tendency exhibited in arguments by Michael Ignatieff, Jeremy Waldron, an...
In War & Ethics, Nicholas Fotion undertakes three main tasks. The first is critical: to analyze ‘Jus...
Law and Morality at War offers a broadly instrumentalist defense of the authority of the laws of war...
Since its earliest incarnations, just war theory has included the requirement that war must be initi...
This article assesses whether the contemporary consensus of just war thinking to allow only for defe...
Under the influence of Jeff McMahan’s groundbreaking work, many recent writings in Just War theory h...
doctrine is true by definitional fiat; second, that combatants fighting for an unjust cause may, pac...