International Humanitarian Law
In: War and Conscience in the Nuclear Age, S. 91-134
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In: War and Conscience in the Nuclear Age, S. 91-134
In: International Legal Dimension of Terrorism, S. 513-514
In: International Human Rights Law, S. 479-495
In: First Do No Harm: Medical Ethics in International Humanitarian Law, S. 77-130
In: Law in Times of Crisis, S. 326-364
The American conception of normative self-justification is traced to the long period of colonial existence under British domination to argue that disentangling the dual American legacy that is blind to its own faults & acts so mercilessly is necessary to understanding state terrorism. The pathological dualism of America's global role is asserted to be weakening the emergent framework of global cooperative arrangements, & eroding the framework of international law. The pattern of subordinating moral & legal guidelines in pursuit of strategic goals is asserted to represent a fundamental breakdown of rule-governed relationships among states, & is related to cases of nonreciprocity of American conduct in the atomic attacks on Hiroshima & Nagasaki, the geopolitical frustrations of the Korean & Vietnamese War. The patterns of the self serving US & Japanese discourse are concluded require further study & challenge to the moralizing war myth that is coupled with dehumanization of the enemy. J. Harwell
In: Targeted Killings and International Law; Beiträge zum ausländischen öffentlichen Recht und Völkerrecht, S. 203-349
In: The Human Rights of Non-citizens, S. 218-240
In: International Humanitarian Law: Origins, Challenges, Prospects, Volume International Humanitarian Law: Prospects, S. 227-236
In: Climate Conflicts - A Case of International Environmental and Humanitarian Law, S. 189-234
In: International Humanitarian Law Facing New Challenges, S. 11-48
In: The Demography of Armed Conflict; International Studies in Population, S. 179-196
In: International Legal Dimension of Terrorism, S. 253-274
In: The Arms Trade And International Law