Coady Et Al
CHALL FOR HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTION C
Coady Et Al
CHALL FOR HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTION C
- Gebundenes Buch
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
The Ethics of Armed Humanitarian Intervention95,99 €
Stanley HoffmannEthics and Politics of Humanitarian Intervention19,99 €
Andreas KriegMotivations for Humanitarian intervention38,99 €
Jonathan ParryThe Ethics of Humanitarian Intervention169,99 €
Ned DobosInsurrection and Intervention68,99 €
Comparative Just War Theory43,99 €
Audra MitchellInternational Intervention in a Secular Age189,99 €-
-
-
Produktdetails
- Verlag: ACADEMIC
- Seitenzahl: 234
- Erscheinungstermin: 5. Juni 2018
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 240mm x 161mm x 17mm
- Gewicht: 520g
- ISBN-13: 9780198812852
- ISBN-10: 019881285X
- Artikelnr.: 50906842
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
C. A. J. Coady is Emeritus Professor of Philosophy at the University of Melbourne and Honorary Professor at the Australian Catholic University. His books include the influential Testimony: A Philosophical Study (1992) and the widely cited Morality and Political Violence (2008). In 2005, he gave the Uehiro Lectures on Practical Ethics at the University of Oxford, subsequently published as Messy Morality: the Challenge of Politics (2008). Dr. Ned Dobos is Senior Lecturer in International and Political Studies at UNSW Canberra. He is the author of Insurrection and Intervention (Cambridge University Press, 2012), and The New Pacifism (Oxford University Press, forthcoming). Dr. Dobos was a Visiting Scholar with the Oxford Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics, and is a Senior Global Justice Fellow at the MacMillan Centre for International Studies at Yale. He is currently Assistant Regional Director of the International Society for Military Ethics, Asia-Pacific Division. Dr Sanyal's primary interests are in political economy and Marxist philosophy. He has published in forums such as Journal of Philosophy, Bioethics, Philosophy Compass, and Social Scientist. He co-edited The Ethics of Human Enhancement, (OUP, 2016).
* Morality, Reality and Humanitarian Intervention: An Introduction to
the Debate
* 1: Stephen Zunes: Complicating the Moral Case of Responsibility to
Protect: Kosovo and Libya
* 2: Richard W. Miller: Why Sovereignty Matters Despite Injustice: the
Ethics of Intervention
* 3: Janna Thompson: Women and Humanitarian Intervention
* 4: Ramon Das: Humanitarian Intervention and Non-Ideal Theory
* 5: Marco Meyer: The Leeriness Objection to the Responsibility to
Protect
* 6: Ned Dobos: On the Uses and "Abuses" of R2P
* 7: Chrisantha Hermanson: Scrutinizing Intentions
* 8: Aidan Hehir: "Words lying on the table"? Norm Contestation and the
Diminution of the Responsibility to Protect
* 9: Robert W. Murray and Tom Keating: Responsibility to Protect,
Polarity and Society: R2P's Political Realities in the International
Order
* 10: Sagar Sanyal: Closing the R2P Chapter; Opening a Dissident
Current within Philosophy of War
the Debate
* 1: Stephen Zunes: Complicating the Moral Case of Responsibility to
Protect: Kosovo and Libya
* 2: Richard W. Miller: Why Sovereignty Matters Despite Injustice: the
Ethics of Intervention
* 3: Janna Thompson: Women and Humanitarian Intervention
* 4: Ramon Das: Humanitarian Intervention and Non-Ideal Theory
* 5: Marco Meyer: The Leeriness Objection to the Responsibility to
Protect
* 6: Ned Dobos: On the Uses and "Abuses" of R2P
* 7: Chrisantha Hermanson: Scrutinizing Intentions
* 8: Aidan Hehir: "Words lying on the table"? Norm Contestation and the
Diminution of the Responsibility to Protect
* 9: Robert W. Murray and Tom Keating: Responsibility to Protect,
Polarity and Society: R2P's Political Realities in the International
Order
* 10: Sagar Sanyal: Closing the R2P Chapter; Opening a Dissident
Current within Philosophy of War
* Morality, Reality and Humanitarian Intervention: An Introduction to
the Debate
* 1: Stephen Zunes: Complicating the Moral Case of Responsibility to
Protect: Kosovo and Libya
* 2: Richard W. Miller: Why Sovereignty Matters Despite Injustice: the
Ethics of Intervention
* 3: Janna Thompson: Women and Humanitarian Intervention
* 4: Ramon Das: Humanitarian Intervention and Non-Ideal Theory
* 5: Marco Meyer: The Leeriness Objection to the Responsibility to
Protect
* 6: Ned Dobos: On the Uses and "Abuses" of R2P
* 7: Chrisantha Hermanson: Scrutinizing Intentions
* 8: Aidan Hehir: "Words lying on the table"? Norm Contestation and the
Diminution of the Responsibility to Protect
* 9: Robert W. Murray and Tom Keating: Responsibility to Protect,
Polarity and Society: R2P's Political Realities in the International
Order
* 10: Sagar Sanyal: Closing the R2P Chapter; Opening a Dissident
Current within Philosophy of War
the Debate
* 1: Stephen Zunes: Complicating the Moral Case of Responsibility to
Protect: Kosovo and Libya
* 2: Richard W. Miller: Why Sovereignty Matters Despite Injustice: the
Ethics of Intervention
* 3: Janna Thompson: Women and Humanitarian Intervention
* 4: Ramon Das: Humanitarian Intervention and Non-Ideal Theory
* 5: Marco Meyer: The Leeriness Objection to the Responsibility to
Protect
* 6: Ned Dobos: On the Uses and "Abuses" of R2P
* 7: Chrisantha Hermanson: Scrutinizing Intentions
* 8: Aidan Hehir: "Words lying on the table"? Norm Contestation and the
Diminution of the Responsibility to Protect
* 9: Robert W. Murray and Tom Keating: Responsibility to Protect,
Polarity and Society: R2P's Political Realities in the International
Order
* 10: Sagar Sanyal: Closing the R2P Chapter; Opening a Dissident
Current within Philosophy of War







