Just War and Human Rights: Fighting with Right Intention

Just War and Human Rights: Fighting with Right Intention

by Todd Burkhardt
Just War and Human Rights: Fighting with Right Intention

Just War and Human Rights: Fighting with Right Intention

by Todd Burkhardt

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Overview

Warfare in the twenty-first century presents significant challenges to the modern state. Serious questions have arisen about the use of drones, target selection, civilian exposure to harm, intervening for humanitarian reasons, and war as a means of forcing regime change. In Just War and Human Rights Todd Burkhardt argues that updating the laws of war and reforming just war theory is needed. A twenty-year veteran of the US Army, Burkhardt claims that war is impermissible unless it is engaged, fought, and concluded with right intention. A state must not only have a just cause and limit its war-making activity in order to vindicate the just cause, but it must also seek to vindicate its just cause in a way that yields a just and lasting peace. A just and lasting peace is motivated by the just war tenet of right intention and predicated on the realization of human rights. Therefore, human rights should not only dictate how a state treats its own people but also how a state treats the people of other countries, insulating them and protecting innocent civilians from the harms of war.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781438464046
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Publication date: 02/21/2017
Series: SUNY Press Open Access
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 222
Sales rank: 773,989
File size: 601 KB

About the Author

Todd Burkhardt is Professor of Military Science at Indiana University at Bloomington.

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction

1. Right Intention and a Just and Lasting Peace

2. Reasonable Chance of Success: Analyzing Postwar Requirements in the Ad Bellum Phase

3. Post Bellum Obligations of Noncombatant Immunity

4. Negative and Positive Corresponding Duties of the Responsibility to Protect

5. Justified Drone Strikes are Predicated on Responsibility to Protect Norms

6. Updating the Fourth Geneva Convention

Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Vita
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