War is harmful to animals, but few have considered how such harm should affect assessments of the justice of military actions. In this paper, we propose a way in which concern for animals can be included within the just-war framework, with a focus on necessity and proportionality. We argue that counting animals in war will not make just-war theory excessively demanding, but it will make just-war theory more humane. By showing how animals can be included in our proportionality and necessity assessments, we provide a crucial first step towards developing an animal-inclusive account of just-war theory
A focus on animal welfare in the use of nonhuman animals in the service of human economic and scient...
The current interest in treatment towards animals goes beyond the focus of isolated instances of bru...
The project underlying this dissertation aims at analyzing three pro-animal-rights theories, evaluat...
Animals have been almost entirely absent from scholarly appraisals of the ethics of war. Just-war th...
Adopting the Clausewitzean (1968) argument that the aim of war is the complete domination of the ‘op...
The main purposes of this article are to assess whether the existing rules of the law of armed confl...
Are humans at war with nonhuman animals, either literally or metaphorically? What might it mean for ...
This paper explores the international implications of liberal theories which extend justice to senti...
Militarisation of conservation (sometimes known as 'green militarisation') is an issue of growing in...
Non-human animals suffer greatly and are exploited in numerous ways by humans. This is a grave injus...
In February 2014 the Taliban revealed the capture of a British military working dog in Afghanistan a...
Animals are sentient beings capable of many of the same feelings experienced by humans. They mourn a...
When making decisions about action to improve animal lives, it is important that we have accurate es...
Millions of animals have been involved in the First World War. Used as warfare tools, they carried o...
American society is characterized by indifference toward the notion of animal rights. Americans are ...
A focus on animal welfare in the use of nonhuman animals in the service of human economic and scient...
The current interest in treatment towards animals goes beyond the focus of isolated instances of bru...
The project underlying this dissertation aims at analyzing three pro-animal-rights theories, evaluat...
Animals have been almost entirely absent from scholarly appraisals of the ethics of war. Just-war th...
Adopting the Clausewitzean (1968) argument that the aim of war is the complete domination of the ‘op...
The main purposes of this article are to assess whether the existing rules of the law of armed confl...
Are humans at war with nonhuman animals, either literally or metaphorically? What might it mean for ...
This paper explores the international implications of liberal theories which extend justice to senti...
Militarisation of conservation (sometimes known as 'green militarisation') is an issue of growing in...
Non-human animals suffer greatly and are exploited in numerous ways by humans. This is a grave injus...
In February 2014 the Taliban revealed the capture of a British military working dog in Afghanistan a...
Animals are sentient beings capable of many of the same feelings experienced by humans. They mourn a...
When making decisions about action to improve animal lives, it is important that we have accurate es...
Millions of animals have been involved in the First World War. Used as warfare tools, they carried o...
American society is characterized by indifference toward the notion of animal rights. Americans are ...
A focus on animal welfare in the use of nonhuman animals in the service of human economic and scient...
The current interest in treatment towards animals goes beyond the focus of isolated instances of bru...
The project underlying this dissertation aims at analyzing three pro-animal-rights theories, evaluat...