Chapter 1 Contents Chapter 2 Preface Chapter 3 Introduction Part 4 I Jus ad Bellum Chapter 5 1 Just Cause Chapter 6 2 Legitimate Authority Chapter 7 3 Right Intentions Chapter 8 4 The Likelihood of Success Chapter 9 5 Proportionality Chapter 10 6 Last Resort Part 11 II Jus in Bello Chapter 12 A Historical Overview of the Jus in Bello Constraints Chapter 13 7 Proportionality Chapter 14 8 Discrimination Part 15 III Cases Chapter 16 9 The NATO Intervention in the Kosovo Crisis: March-June 1999 Chapter 17 10 NATO's Intervention in the Kosovo Crisis: Whose Justice? Chapter 18 11 Kosovo and the Question of a Just Secession Chapter 19 12 TERRORISM Chapter 20 13 The War in Iraq (2003 and Beyond) Chapter 21 Concluding Comments
Nick Fotion is professor of philosophy at Emory University. Bruno Coppieters is professor of political science at Vrije Universiteit Brussel in Belgium.
For a reader who is looking for an interesting, concise, and
well-organized book on the just war criteria, utilizing
contemporary examples to demonstrate how they work, this volume is
a must-read.
*H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online*
The book will be of special interest to anyone working in the field
of military ethics, and it will also be valuable to others with an
interest in moral issues in the context of war.
*Journal of Peace Research*
This excellent book on war and ethics focuses in particular on just
war theory, but it also examines in some detail realism, militarism
and pacifism.
*Journal of Peace Research*
The book is a very good demonstration of just-war theory's current
relevance and importance.
*CHOICE*
There is extensive literature that deals with threat perceptions in
the United States, China, the European Union, and Russia. This book
is unique in that it brings [to the debate] the application of
transcultural ethical principles to the question of war.
*Dmitri Trenin, Carnegie Moscow Center*
Coppieters and Fotion have edited an interesting and useful volume
on the contemporary relevance and application of just war theory. .
. . the volume is a very welcome addition. . . . it offers good
insights into the debate on the ethics of war and ultimately
enriches the debate.
*Millennium: Journal of International Studies*
This well-integrated book is truly an impressive cross-cultural
scholarly collaboration and international effort. It is a welcome
addition to a large and growing literature and will prove to be an
excellent value not only to interested scholars, but also in
related undergraduate and graduate university courses in religion,
philosophy, political science and international relations.
*Rex Martin, University of Kansas*
I am impressed by the scholarship, breadth, and clarity of the
work. The authors clearly discuss the various principles and rules
of Just War Theory . . . and cover many diverse perspectives. The
work draws on a number of helpful examples, including many from
wars of the past decade, to create an international viewpoint.
*Rick Werner, Hamilton College*
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