Limited Force and the Fight for the Just War Tradition / Christian Nikolaus Braun.
Material type:
- text
- computer
- online resource
- 9781647123437
Limited Force and the Fight for the Just War Tradition -- The Neoclassical Just War as Third Way -- Recapturing Casuistry for Just War Thinking -- Why Aquinas? -- Aquinas on the Authority to Wage War -- Aquinas on Just Cause and Right Intention -- The Cases : Targeted Killing -- Targeted Killing : Casuistical Investigation and General Argument -- The Cases : Limited Strikes to Enforce International Norms -- Limited Strikes : Casuistical Investigation and General Argument.
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"One of the most contentious developments in contemporary international affairs has been the increase in uses of force-short-of-war, such as targeted killings, limited airstrikes, and no-fly zones. On the one hand, uses of force-short-of-war appear more compartmentalized and containable, but on the other hand, they have encouraged a more frequent recourse to arms. How, then, are we to make moral sense of this shift toward the small-scale uses of force? This debate has divided just-war theorists, but author Christian Nikolaus Braun offers a new perspective. He evaluates comprehensively the ethics framework jus ad vim (the just use of force-short-of-war) as a pillar of just war theory and as a practical matter of deciding when military interventions below the level of war can and cannot be justified. The book's moral argument will rely on a historical reading of the just-war thought of Thomas Aquinas"-- Provided by publisher.
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