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Expanding Responsibility for the Just War

Expanding Responsibility for the Just War

Expanding Responsibility for the Just War

A Feminist Critique
Rosemary Kellison, University of West Georgia
November 2018
Available
Hardback
9781108473149
NZD$188.95
inc GST
Hardback
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eBook

    As demonstrated in any conflict, war is violent and causes grave harms to innocent persons, even when fought in compliance with just war criteria. In this book, Rosemary Kellison presents a feminist critique of just war reasoning, with particular focus on the issue of responsibility for harm to noncombatants. Contemporary just war reasoning denies the violence of war by suggesting that many of the harms caused by war are necessary, though regrettable, injuries for which inflicting agents bear no responsibility. She challenges this narrow understanding of responsibility through a feminist ethical approach that emphasizes the relationality of humans and the resulting asymmetries in their relative power and vulnerability. According to this approach, the powerful individual and collective agents who inflict harm during war are responsible for recognizing and responding to the vulnerable persons they harm, and thereby reducing the likelihood of future violence. Kellison's volume goes beyond abstract theoretical work to consider the real implications of an important ethical problem.

    • Focuses on one specific issue in just war reasoning: responsibility for harm to noncombatants
    • Brings feminist moral philosophy and peace studies into the conversation around ethics of war
    • Uses examples from the post-9/11 wars, including accounts from actual civilian survivors

    Product details

    November 2018
    Hardback
    9781108473149
    264 pages
    234 × 156 × 19 mm
    0.53kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Feminist ethics
    • 2. Necessity and the evasion of responsibility
    • 3. Relational personhood and the violence of war
    • 4. Intention matters
    • 5. From evading to expanding responsibility
    • 6. Taking responsibility for harmdoing in war.
      Author
    • Rosemary Kellison , University of West Georgia

      Rosemary Kellison is Associate Professor of Philosophy and Religion at the University of West Georgia. A scholar of comparative religious ethics, she has published in the Journal of Religious Ethics, Soundings, and the Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion.