The Use of Force in Humanitarian Intervention: Morality and PracticalitiesRoutledge, 2017. gada 30. nov. - 228 lappuses Humanitarian intervention is a many layered and complex concept. While moral society has an obligation to stop deliberate and persistent serious human rights abuse, the direct use of force remains a contentious option alongside other strategies employed by the international community. This study analyzes the various ethical positions, particularly consequentialism, welfare-utilitarianism and just war theory to unravel this intricate topic. Uniquely, the book goes beyond previous philosophical or ethical treatments of the subject to provide a more rounded and practical reflection on the lessons learned from the revival of humanitarian intervention as a tool of conflict resolution. |
Saturs
Plausable Interventionist Strategies | |
Humanitarian Law and Military Intervention | |
Objections to the Ethical Principles and Applications | |
Ethnic Conflict in the Balkans 19921999 A Case Study | |
The VanceOwen Plan | |
Events Leading Up to the 1997 1999 Civil War in Kosovo | |
What Type of Wars Were the Balkans Conflicts? | |
Conclusion | |
Citi izdevumi - Skatīt visu
The Use of Force in Humanitarian Intervention: Morality and Practicalities John Janzekovic Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 2006 |
The Use of Force in Humanitarian Intervention: Morality and Practicalities John Janzekovic Ierobežota priekšskatīšana - 2013 |
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action affairs aggression air campaign Albanians Amnesty International argue armed conflict atrocities attack Balkans belligerents bombing Bosnia Herzegovina Bosnian Serbs casualties cease-fire Chapter civil civilians conduct conventions crimes against humanity Criminal Croatia death Declaration deliberate East Timor Ethics ethnic cleansing example extreme human rights fundamental genocide global human behaviour human rights abuses humanitarian abuse humanitarian crises humanitarian disaster humanitarian intervention humanitarian law humanitarian purposes humanitarian reasons important individual international community international law intervention for humanitarian interventionists Just-war theorists Kosovars Kosovo laws of armed means mediation military engagement military force military intervention Milosevic moral obligation morally wrong Muslim national interest NATO non-violent outcomes peace peacekeeping peacemaking Peter Singer political population problem protect protocols realists recognised response Rwanda safe-areas Sarajevo Security Council Serbian society sovereignty stop the killing strategies suffering targets terrorism theory threat torture troops United Nations utilitarianism violations violence Yugoslav Yugoslavia