This collection examines the role of the just war tradition and
its criteria in solving pressing present-day challenges. In
particular, it deals with three types of challenges to world public
order. One is anticipatory self-defense, in which one state attacks
another to pre-empt or prevent an attack on itself, as the United
States claimed in relation to Iraq in 2003. The second challenge is
humanitarian intervention, in which one state attacks another to
stop gross, large-scale violations of human rights, as NATO claimed
to be doing on behalf of Kosovo in 1999. Both practices may erode
world public order, given the normative strength of Article 2(4) of
the UN Charter prohibiting the threat or use of force against other
states. However, both practices pose dilemmas, in that they also
"preserve" world public order by not allowing impunity for human
rights abusers or the misuse of international law to the advantage
of genuine aggressors. The third challenge is the execution of
warfare in a new geopolitical environment characterized by new
technologies and asymmetry of belligerents. The chapters in this
book, written from a variety of disciplinary perspectives, turn to
the just war tradition to attempt to resolve these tensions.
This book was based on a special issue of the "Journal of
Military Ethics."
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