-
23Counting the Dead: The Proportionality of Predation in PakistanIn Bradley Jay Strawser (ed.), Killing by Remote Control: The Ethics of an Unmanned Military, Oup Usa. pp. 126-153. 2013.Since June 2004 the Central Intelligence Agency is widely reported to have carried out around 300 covert drone strikes in Northwest Pakistan which have killed more than 2000 people including some civilians. Critics have charged that the strikes have resulted in elevated and even disproportionate numbers of civilian deaths. Senior US officials, by contrast, have claimed that civilian casualties have been low. This chapter explores the proportionality of the civilian casualties of drone strikes, d…Read more
-
23Distinguishing Drones: An ExchangeIn Bradley Jay Strawser (ed.), Killing by Remote Control: The Ethics of an Unmanned Military, Oup Usa. pp. 47-66. 2013.Should states be permitted to use drones to kill terrorists hiding in foreign territory even when these pose a heightened danger to civilians relative to other types of operations? This chapter presents an exchange of views on this question. It focuses on the principle of distinction, a central pillar of both the law of armed conflict and just war theory, and how it should apply to drone strikes. This chapter stresses that drones are new weapons which demand revised rules, and argues that the pr…Read more
-
Isaiah Berlin's Pluralist Thought and Liberalism: A Re-Reading and Contrast with John RawlsDissertation, Mcgill University (Canada). 2002.This dissertation argues that Isaiah Berlin and John Rawls can be seen as seminal contributors to two quite distinct revivals of political theory in the latter half of the twentieth century. It suggests that coming to grips with the different underlying character of these revivals and writers is important to understanding political theory and liberalism today. However, while the importance Berlin's of Berlin's work is increasingly recognized, there remain puzzling controversies concerning its ov…Read more
-
13Re-Visiting Berlin: Why Two Liberties are Better than OneJournal of International Political Theory 1 138-157. 2005.
-
14Frontiers of Diversity critically examines the explanatory and normative power of pluralism in contemporary philosophy, politics, economics and culture. Based on the papers presented at the "First Global Conference on Critical Issues in Pluralism" at Mansfield College, Oxford, it brings together for the first time essays examining pluralism's impact, both positive and negative, in each of these critical domains. These essays exhibit something of the fertility of the concept of pluralism, not onl…Read more
-
20Michael Ignatieff, The Lesser Evil: Political Ethics in an Age of TerrorJournal of International Political Theory 1 103-106. 2005.
-
91Upholding the Principle of Distinction in Counter-Terrorist Operations: A DialogueJournal of Military Ethics 9 (1): 3-22. 2010.
-
100Learning to Live with Drones: Answering Jeremy Waldron and the Neutralist CritiqueJournal of Military Ethics 14 (2): 128-145. 2015.ABSTRACTAmong the most forceful and provocative criticisms that have been leveled at US drone strikes against alleged terrorists far from conventional battlefields has been Jeremy Waldron's charge that they cannot be justified in terms of a neutral principle that most reasonable people would accept. In essence, Waldron asks ‘whether we are comfortable with [such a norm] in the hands of our enemies’. He thinks most people will say ‘no’ and that this is a reason not to embrace a permissive norm in…Read more
-
73Does justice stand alone?Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 18 (1): 57-73. 2015.
-
114Lukes’s Three-Dimensional Model of Power Redux (review)Social Theory and Practice 33 (3): 489-500. 2007.
-
49Re-Visiting Berlin: Why Two Liberties are Better than OnePolitics and Ethics Review 1 (2): 138-157. 2005.
-
115Terminating Terror
The Legality, Ethics and Effectiveness of Targeting TerroristsTheoria 54 (114): 1-27. 2007.In the ongoing war on terror both the American and Israeli governments have resorted to a policy of ‘targeting terrorists’. In essence, both governments authorize their military or intelligence services to kill specific ‘terrorists’ who they believe mortally threaten citizens and cannot otherwise be neutralized. President Bush calls this ‘sudden justice’ and the Israeli government ‘targeted killing’ but their critics speak of ‘assassination’, ‘liquidation’ or ‘extra-judicial killing’. Since 11 S…Read more -
61Michael Ignatieff,The Lesser Evil: Political Ethics in an Age of TerrorPolitics and Ethics Review 1 (1): 103-106. 2005.
-
University of Massachusetts, DartmouthRegular Faculty
Areas of Interest
| Applied Ethics |
| Social and Political Philosophy |
| 17th/18th Century Philosophy |