000 02034cam a2200169 4500
020 _a9780521137164 (pbk.) :
_cBND 43.88 /
_c19.99GBP
100 1 _aNATHANSON Stephen
245 _aTerrorism and the ethics of war /
_cStephen Nathanson
260 _aCambridge UK :
_bCambridge University Press,
_c2010
300 _ax, 317 pages ; 24 cm.
520 _a"Most people strongly condemn terrorism; yet they often fail to say how terrorist acts differ from other acts of violence such as the killing of civilians in war. Stephen Nathanson argues that we cannot have morally credible views about terrorism if we focus on terrorism alone and neglect broader issues about the ethics of war. His book Challenges influential views on the ethics of war, including the realist view that morality does not apply to war, and Michael Walzer's defense of attacks on civilians in "supreme emergency" circumstances. It provides a clear definition of terrorism, an analysis of what makes terrorism morally wrong, and a rule-utilitarian defense of noncombatant immunity, as well as discussions of the Allied bombings of cities in the World War II, collateral damage, and the clash between rights theories and utilitarianism. it will interest a wide range of readers in philosophy, political theory, international relations, and law." ""In this carefully argued work, Stephen Nathanson has brought together two areas, terrorism and the ethics of war, too often treated separately. The result is new moral clarity and insight in both areas, especially regarding the moral treatment due to civilians by purveyors of military violence. This work is particularly valuable for those seeking a moral understanding of terrorism and an appreciation of what they must do to make their condemnation of terrorism morally credible.""--BOOK JACKET.
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
650 _aTERRORISM
_xMORAL AND ETHICAL ASPECTS
650 _aWAR
_xMORAL AND ETHICAL ASPECTS
945 _i33352-1001
_rY
_sY
945 _i33352-2001
_rY
_sY
999 _c18661
_d18661