War and Individual Rights

DRAPER,K

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Author
DRAPER,K
Publish Date
10/01/2015
Subtitle
The Foundations of Just War Theory
Book Type
Hardcover
Number of Pages
272
Publisher Name
OXFORD
ISBN-10
019938889X
ISBN-13
9780199388899
citemno
207825
Edition
1
SKU
9780199388899

Description

Kai Draper begins his book with the assumption that individual rights exist and stand as moral obstacles to the pursuit of national no less than personal interests. That assumption might seem to demand a pacifist rejection of war, for any sustained war effort requires military operations that predictably kill many noncombatants as "collateral damage," and presumably at least most noncombatants have a right not to be killed. Yet Draper ends with the conclusion that sometimes recourse to war is justified. In making his argument, he relies on the insights of John Locke to develop and defend a framework of rights to serve as the foundation for a new just war theory. Notably missing from that framework is any doctrine of double effect. Most just war theorists rely on that doctrine to justify injuring and killing innocent bystanders, but Draper argues that various prominent formulations of the doctrine are either untenable or irrelevant to the ethics of war. Ultimately he offers a single pri