Preface
Andrew Altman
: Introduction
PART I: THE CHANGING FACE OF WAR: TARGETING NON-COMBATANTS
1: Mark "Max" Maxwell: Allowing the State to Rebut the Civilian
Presumption: Playing Whack-A-Mole Without a Mallet?
2: Jens David Ohlin: Targeting Co-belligerents
3: Daniel Statman: Can Just War Theory Justify Targeted Killing?
Three Possible Models
4: Jeremy Waldron
: Justifying Targeted Killing With a Neutral Principle?
PART II: NORMATIVE FOUNDATIONS: LAW ENFORCEMENT OR WAR?
5: Jeff McMahan: The Ethics of Targeted Killing on a Moral
Continuum
6: Claire Finkelstein: Targeted Killing as Preemptive Action
7: Richard V. Meyer
: The Privilege of Belligerency and Formal Declarations of War
PART III: TARGETED KILLING AND SELF-DEFENSE
8: Craig Martin: Going Medieval: Targeted Killing, Self-Defense,
and the Jus ad Bellum Regime
9: Russell Christopher: Imminence in Justified Targeted Killing
10: Phil Montague
: Defending Defensive Targeted Killings
PART IV: EXERCISING JUDGMENT IN TARGETED KILLING DECISIONS
11: Amos N. Guiora: The Importance of Criteria-Based Reasoning in
Targeted Killing Decisions
12: Gregory S. McNeal: Are Targeted Killings Unlawful? A Case Study
in Empirical Claims without Empirical Evidence
13: Kevin H. Govern: Operation Neptune Spear: Was Killing Bin Laden
a Legitimate Military Objective?
14: Kenneth Anderson
: Efficiency in Bello and ad Bellum: Making the Use of Force Too
Easy?
PART V: UTILITARIAN TRADE-OFFS AND DEONTOLOGICAL CONSTRAINTS
15: Fernando R. Tesón: Targeted Killing and the Logic of Double
Effect
16: Michael S. Moore: Targeted Killings and the Morality of Hard
Choices
17: Leo Katz: Targeted Killing and the Strategic use of
Self-Defense
Index
Claire Finkelstein is the Algernon Biddle Professor of Law and
Professor of Philosophy at the University of Pennsylvania, and a
co-Director of the University of Pennsylvania Institute of Law and
Philosophy. She writes in the areas of criminal law theory, moral
and political philosophy, philosophy of law, international law, and
rational choice theory. A particular focus of her work is bringing
philosophical rational choice theory to bear on legal theory, and
she is
particularly interested in tracing the implications of Hobbes'
political theory for substantive legal questions. Recently she has
also been writing on the moral and legal aspects of
government-sponsored torture as part of the U.S. national security
program. In 2008 Finkelstein was a Siemens Fellow at the American
Academy in Berlin, during which time she presented papers in
Berlin, Leipzig, and Heidelberg. She is currently working on her
book, Contractarian Legal Theory, and is the editor of Hobbes on
Law (Ashgate, 2005). Jens Ohlin's research and teaching interests
are focused on criminal law theory, public international law, and
international criminal
law. He is the author, with George Fletcher, of Defending Humanity:
When Force is Justified and Why (Oxford University Press, 2008),
which offers a new account of international self-defense through a
comparative analysis
of the rules of self-defense in criminal law. His scholarly work
has appeared in top law reviews and journals, including the
Columbia Law Review, Cornell Law Review, Harvard International Law
Journal, American Journal of International Law, and several OUP
edited volumes. His current research focuses on the normative
application of criminal law concepts in international criminal law,
especially with regard to genocide, torture, joint criminal
enterprise and
co-perpetration, as well as the philosophical foundations of
collective criminal action.
Andrew Altman is Professor of Philosophy at Georgia State
University and Director of Research of the Jean Beer Blumenfeld
Center for Ethics. Previously, he taught at George Washington
University and Bowling Green State University. Professor Altman was
a Liberal Arts Fellow in Law at the Harvard Law School and has
published extensively in legal and political philosophy. His
publications include the books, Critical Legal Studies: A Liberal
Critique (Princeton U.P.), Arguing About
Law: An Introduction to Legal Philosophy (Wadsworth) and A Liberal
Theory of International Justice (co-authored with Christopher H.
Wellman; O.U.P.) His articles have appeared in Philosophy and
Public Affairs and
Ethics, among other leading philosophy journals.
`We are entering a new era in which targeted killing will be the
preferred method of fighting enemies in a great many contexts. In
terms of geographical reach, targeting precision, the manageability
of the intervention, and the minimization of the cost and
casualties, the practice is hugely attractive to militaries and
politicians alike. But it also comes with potentially grave costs
in terms of respect for basic moral principles, as well as
established
human rights and international humanitarian law. This book provides
the best possible panorama of diverse and competing perspectives on
emerging practices and will be an invaluable guide to those
shaping
future policies in this area.'
Philip Alston John Norton Pomeroy Professor of Law, New York
University
`The debate over targeted killings has become the most contentious
in the contemporary law and morality of war. Is it a legitimate
tactic that saves lives compared with old-fashioned bombing
campaigns? Or is it ruthless execution by non-uniformed spies
piloting science-fiction drones from the safety of a distant
control room? May states kill if capture is possible? May they kill
their own citizens? What rights do the targets have? Is there a
moral
difference between killing anonymous enemies and killing men and
women whose names you know? The law is ambiguous, and the moral
issues cloudy. This volume is the most useful and thought-provoking
discussion
available, with a stellar group of authors who delve deep.'
David Luban University Professor in Law and Philosophy Georgetown
University
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |