•  445
    Defensive Wars and the Reprisal Dilemma
    Australasian Journal of Philosophy 93 (3): 583-601. 2015.
    I address a foundational problem with accounts of the morality of war that are derived from the Just War Tradition. Such accounts problematically focus on ‘the moment of crisis’: i.e. when a state is considering a resort to war. This is problematic because sometimes the state considering the resort to war is partly responsible for wrongly creating the conditions in which the resort to war becomes necessary. By ignoring this possibility, JWT effectively ignores, in its moral evaluation of wars, c…Read more
  •  69
    Peter A. French, War and Moral Dissonance (review)
    Journal of Moral Philosophy 10 (1): 116-119. 2013.
    Book review of Peter French's "War and Moral Dissonance".
  •  682
    Non-Combatant Immunity and War-Profiteering
    In Helen Frowe & Lazar Seth (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of Ethics of War, Oxford University Press. 2017.
    The principle of noncombatant immunity prohibits warring parties from intentionally targeting noncombatants. I explicate the moral version of this view and its criticisms by reductive individualists; they argue that certain civilians on the unjust side are morally liable to be lethally targeted to forestall substantial contributions to that war. I then argue that reductivists are mistaken in thinking that causally contributing to an unjust war is a necessary condition for moral liability. Certai…Read more