In this essay, I argue that humanitarian intervention should be considered as morally obligatory in circumstances in which a certain set of moral conditions are satisfied. The core of this argument shows that when the real life situation satisfies all these moral factors/conditions, such situation is, in fact, analogous to the famous Drowning Child Case by Peter Singer. Just like in such a case, we have the moral obligation to help the child, we have the moral obligation to help the people who are suffering in the humanitarian crisis.No embargoAcademic Major: Political Scienc
International and humanitarian law are important adjuncts to the use of directed force to stop human...
A review of: Hard Choices: Moral Dilemmas in Humanitarian Intervention edited by Jonathan Moore. New...
Since the end of the Cold War, the debate on humanitarian interventions has gained strength. The leg...
In this essay, I argue that humanitarian intervention should be considered as morally obligatory in ...
This article will be broken into four separate parts. The first section will be whether or not there...
This thesis throws new light on a central question in the normative theory of armed humanitarian int...
Perhaps the most discussed topic amongst just war theorists during the 1990s was the moral (and lega...
Large-scale humanitarian crises in foreign countries raise the question of whether or not other coun...
The main subject of this paper are the ethical aspects of humanitarian military intervention. Author...
This thesis addresses primary concepts in the humanitarian intervention debates. I argue that humani...
This thesis investigates ethical debates that surround the definition, the conduct, and the occasion...
In this paper I develop an argument to the effect that humanitarian moral interventions, far from be...
It has become clear that the principle of sovereignty no longer affords protection to governments th...
This article argues that humanitarian intervention to prevent the mass slaughter by a state of its o...
The article examines a Kantian argument that there is a strict moral duty to intervene when fundamen...
International and humanitarian law are important adjuncts to the use of directed force to stop human...
A review of: Hard Choices: Moral Dilemmas in Humanitarian Intervention edited by Jonathan Moore. New...
Since the end of the Cold War, the debate on humanitarian interventions has gained strength. The leg...
In this essay, I argue that humanitarian intervention should be considered as morally obligatory in ...
This article will be broken into four separate parts. The first section will be whether or not there...
This thesis throws new light on a central question in the normative theory of armed humanitarian int...
Perhaps the most discussed topic amongst just war theorists during the 1990s was the moral (and lega...
Large-scale humanitarian crises in foreign countries raise the question of whether or not other coun...
The main subject of this paper are the ethical aspects of humanitarian military intervention. Author...
This thesis addresses primary concepts in the humanitarian intervention debates. I argue that humani...
This thesis investigates ethical debates that surround the definition, the conduct, and the occasion...
In this paper I develop an argument to the effect that humanitarian moral interventions, far from be...
It has become clear that the principle of sovereignty no longer affords protection to governments th...
This article argues that humanitarian intervention to prevent the mass slaughter by a state of its o...
The article examines a Kantian argument that there is a strict moral duty to intervene when fundamen...
International and humanitarian law are important adjuncts to the use of directed force to stop human...
A review of: Hard Choices: Moral Dilemmas in Humanitarian Intervention edited by Jonathan Moore. New...
Since the end of the Cold War, the debate on humanitarian interventions has gained strength. The leg...