Ethics in Global Politics - L7093A - David Karp View Online 1.Hutchings K.: Global ethics. Polity, Cambridge (2010). 2.Beitz C.R., NetLibrary, Inc: Political theory and international relations. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1999). 3.Beitz C.R.: Political theory and international relations. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1999). 4.Beitz C.R.: The idea of human rights. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2009). 5.Beitz C.R.: The idea of human rights. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2009). 6.Beitz C.R.: The idea of human rights. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2011). 7.Bellamy A.J.: Massacres and morality: mass atrocities in an age of civilian immunity. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2012). 8.Bellamy A.J.: Massacres and morality: mass atrocities in an age of civilian immunity. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2012). 9.Bellamy A.J.: Massacres and morality: mass atrocities in an age of civilian immunity. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2012). 10.Buchanan A.E., Oxford University Press: Justice, legitimacy, and self-determination: moral foundations for international law. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2003). 11.Buchanan A.E.: Justice, legitimacy, and self-determination: moral foundations for international law. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2003). 12.Donnelly J.: Universal human rights in theory and practice. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, N.Y. (2002). 13.Erskine T., British Academy: Embedded cosmopolitanism: duties to strangers and enemies in a world of dislocated communities. Published for The British Academy by Oxford University Press, Oxford (2008). 14.Miller D., Oxford University Press: National responsibility and global justice. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2007). 15.Miller D.: National responsibility and global justice. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2012). 16.Nussbaum M.C.: Women and human development: the capabilities approach. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2000). 17.O Neill O.: Towards justice and virtue: a constructive account of practical reasoning. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1996). 18.Pogge T.W.M.: World poverty and human rights: cosmopolitan responsibilities and reforms. Polity, Cambridge (2008). 19.Rawls J.: The law of peoples: with The idea of public reason revisited. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (2001). 20.Raz J.: The morality of freedom. Clarendon, Oxford (1986). 21.Raz J.: The morality of freedom. Clarendon P., Oxford (1986). 22.Robinson F.: The ethics of care: a feminist approach to human security. Temple University Press, Philadelphia (2011). 23.Shue H.: Basic rights: subsistence, affluence and U.S. foreign policy. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1996). 24.Walzer M.: Just and unjust wars: a moral argument with historical illustrations. BasicBooks, New York, N.Y. (2006). 25.Hutchings K.: Global ethics. Polity, Cambridge (2010). 26.Dunne T., Kurki M., Smith S. eds: International relations theories: discipline and diversity. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2013). 27.Finnemore M., Sikkink K.: International Norm Dynamics and Political Change. International Organization. 52, 887 917 (1998). 28.Brown C.: Sovereignty, rights, and justice: international political theory today. Polity, Oxford (2002). 29.Krasner S.D.: Sovereignty: organized hypocrisy. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1999). 30.Jackson R.H.: Martin Wight, International Theory and the Good Life. Millennium - Journal of International Studies. 19, 261 272 (1990). 31.Nadelmann E.A.: Global prohibition regimes: the evolution of norms in international society. International Organization. 44, (1990). 1/7
32.Price R.: Reversing the Gun Sights: Transnational Civil Society Targets Land Mines. International Organization. 52, 613 644 (1998). 33.SENDING O.J.: Constitution, Choice and Change: Problems with the `Logic of Appropriateness and its Use in Constructivist Theory. European Journal of International Relations. 8, 443 470 (2002). 34.Crawford N.C.: Argument and change in world politics: ethics, decolonization, and humanitarian intervention. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK (2002). 35.Klotz A.: Norms in international relations: the struggle against apartheid. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, N.Y. (1999). 36.Hutchings K.: Global ethics. Polity, Cambridge (2010). 37.MacIntyre A.: After virtue: a study in moral theory. University of Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame, Ind (1984). 38.John Rawls: Outline of a Decision Procedure for Ethics. The Philosophical Review. 60, 177 197 (1951). 39.Lilla M., Dworkin R.W., Silvers R.B., Kelly A.: The legacy of Isaiah Berlin. New York Review Books, New York (2001). 40.Hutchings K.: Global ethics. Polity, Cambridge (2010). 41.Peter Singer: Famine, Affluence, and Morality. Philosophy & Public Affairs. 1, 229 243 (1972). 42.Kuper, Andrew: More than charity: Cosmopolitan alternatives to the Singer solution / Poverty, facts, and political philosophies: Response to More than charity / Facts, theories, and hard choices: Reply to Peter Singer / Achieving the best outcome: Final rejoinder. Ethics & International Affairs. 16, (2002). 43.Rawls J.: The law of peoples: with The idea of public reason revisited. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (2001). 44.Barry C., Pogge T.W.: GLOBAL INSTITUTIONS AND RESPONSIBILITIES. Metaphilosophy. 36, 1 2. 45.Beitz C.R., NetLibrary, Inc: Political theory and international relations. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1999). 46.Beitz C.R.: Political theory and international relations. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1999). 47.Charles R. Beitz: Rawls s Law of Peoples*. Ethics. 110, 669 696 (2000). 48.Brown C.: Sovereignty, rights, and justice: international political theory today. Polity, Oxford (2002). 49.Allen Buchanan: Justice and Charity. Ethics. 97, 558 575 (1987). 50.Allen Buchanan: Rawls s Law of Peoples: Rules for a Vanished Westphalian World*. Ethics. 110, 697 721 (2000). 51.Caney S., Oxford University Press: Justice beyond borders: a global political theory. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2005). 52.Caney S.: Justice beyond borders: a global political theory. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2005). 53.Chatterjee D.K.: The ethics of assistance: morality and the distant needy. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2004). 54.Cochran M.: Normative theory in international relations: a pragmatic approach. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1999). 55.Edkins J.: Whose hunger?: concepts of famine, practices of aid. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis (2002). 56.Edkins J.: Whose hunger?: concepts of famine, practices of aid. University of Minnesota Press, Minneapolis (2000). 57.Robert E. Goodin: What is So Special about Our Fellow Countrymen? Ethics. 98, 663 686 (1988). 58.Illingworth P.M.L., Pogge T.W.M., Wenar L.: Giving well: the ethics of philanthropy. Oxford University Press, New York (2011). 59.Langlois A.J.: Charity and Justice in Global Poverty Relief. Australian Journal of Political Science. 43, 685 698 (2008). 60.Liam B. Murphy: Institutions and the Demands of Justice. Philosophy & Public Affairs. 27, 251 291 (1998). 61.Thomas Nagel: The Problem of Global Justice. Philosophy & Public Affairs. 33, 113 147 (2005). 62.Nussbaum M.C.: Women and human development: the capabilities approach. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2000). 63.O Neill O.: Bounds of justice. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2000). 64.Thomas W. Pogge: An Egalitarian Law of Peoples. Philosophy & Public Affairs. 23, 195 224 (1994). 65.Pogge T.W.M., Unesco: Freedom from poverty as a human right: who owes what to the very poor? Oxford University Press, Oxford (2007). 66.Rawls J.: The law of peoples: with The idea of public reason revisited. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass (2001). 67.Andrea Sangiovanni: Global Justice, Reciprocity, and the State. Philosophy & Public Affairs. 35, 3 39 (2007). 68.Scanlon T.: What we owe to each other. Belknap, 2/7
Cambridge, Mass (2000). 69.Henry Shue: Mediating Duties. Ethics. 98, 687 704 (1988). 70.Singer P.: The life you can save: acting now to end world poverty. Random House, New York (2009). 71.Young I.M.: Responsibility and Global Labor Justice. Journal of Political Philosophy. 12, 365 388 (2004). 72.Crocker D.A.: Ethics of global development: agency, capability, and deliberative democracy. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2009). 73.Ta nnsjo T.: Understanding ethics: an introduction to moral theory. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (2013). 74.Hutchings K.: Global ethics. Polity, Cambridge (2010). 75.Nussbaum M.C., Sen A., Oxford University Press: The quality of life. Oxford University Press, Oxford (1993). 76.Nussbaum M.C., Sen A., World Institute for Development Economics Research: The quality of life. Clarendon P., Oxford (1993). 77.Hopgood S.: Keepers of the flame: understanding Amnesty International. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, N.Y. (2006). 78.Shute S., Hurley S., Amnesty International: On human rights. Basic Books, New York (1993). 79.Arendt H.: Eichmann in Jerusalem: a report on the banality of evil. Penguin, London (1994). 80.Hopgood S.: Moral Authority, Modernity and the Politics of the Sacred. European Journal of International Relations. 15, 229 255 (2009). 81.MacIntyre A.: After virtue: a study in moral theory. University of Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame, Ind (1984). 82.Martha C. Nussbaum: Virtue Ethics: A Misleading Category? The Journal of Ethics. 3, 163 201 (1999). 83.Orford A.: International authority and the responsibility to protect. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2011). 84.Orford A.: International authority and the responsibility to protect. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2011). 85.John Rawls: Kantian Constructivism in Moral Theory. The Journal of Philosophy. 77, 515 572 (1980). 86.Raz J.: The morality of freedom. Clarendon, Oxford (1986). 87.Raz J.: The morality of freedom. Clarendon P., Oxford (1986). 88.Risse T.: Let s Argue! : Communicative Action in World Politics. International Organization. 54, 1 39 (2000). 89.Fiona Robinson: Globalizing Care: Ethics, Feminist Theory, and International Relations. Alternatives: Global, Local, Political. 22, 113 133 (1997). 90.Robinson F.: The ethics of care: a feminist approach to human security. Temple University Press, Philadelphia (2011). 91.Shute S., Hurley S., Amnesty International: On human rights. Basic Books, New York (1993). 92.J. B. Schneewind: The Misfortunes of Virtue. Ethics. 101, 42 63 (1990). 93.Stocker, Michael: Acts, Perfect Duties and Imperfect Duties. Review of MetaphysicsReview of Metaphysics. 20,. 94.Lang, Anthony F, Jr: Crime and Punishment: Holding States Accountable. Ethics & International Affairs. 21, 239 257. 95.Erskine, Toni: Kicking Bodies and Damning Souls: The Danger of Harming Innocent Individuals While Punishing Delinquent States. Ethics & International Affairs. 24, 261 285. 96.Pasternak A.: The Collective Responsibility of Democratic Publics. Canadian Journal of Philosophy. 41, 99 123 (2011). 97.Jeffery R.: Confronting evil in international relations: ethical responses to problems of moral agency. Palgrave Macmillan, New York, N.Y. (2008). 98.Jeffery R.: Confronting evil in international relations: ethical responses to problems of moral agency. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2008). 99.Ainley K.: The International Criminal Court on trial. Cambridge Review of International Affairs. 24, 309 333 (2011). 100.Brown, Chris: Moral agency and international society. Ethics & International Affairs. 15, (2001). 101.Erskine, Toni: Assigning responsibilities to institutional moral agents: The case of states and quasi-states. Ethics & International Affairs. 15, (2001). 102.Erskine T., BISA/ISA Joint Special Workshop, Can Institutions Have Morals?, MyiLibrary: Can institutions have responsibilities?: collective moral agency and international relations. Palgrave Macmillan, 3/7
Basingstoke (2003). 103.Erskine T., BISA/ISA Joint Special Workshop, Can Institutions Have Morals?, British International Studies Association, International Studies Association: Can institutions have responsibilities?: collective moral agency and international relations. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2003). 104.Joel Feinberg: Collective Responsibility. The Journal of Philosophy. 65, 674 688 (1968). 105.Jeffery R.: Confronting evil in international relations: ethical responses to problems of moral agency. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2008). 106.Besson S., Tasioulas J.: The philosophy of international law. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2010). 107.MacIntyre, Alasdair: Social Structures and their Threats to Moral Agency. Philosophy. 74, 311 329 (2001). 108.Miller D., Oxford University Press: National responsibility and global justice. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2007). 109.Miller D.: National responsibility and global justice. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2012). 110.Philip Pettit: Responsibility Incorporated*. Ethics. 117, 171 201 (2007). 111.John Rawls: Two Concepts of Rules. The Philosophical Review. 64, 3 32 (1955). 112.Rodman, Kenneth A: Compromising Justice: Why the Bush Administration and the NGOs Are Both Wrong about the ICC. Ethics & International Affairs. 20, 25 53 (2006). 113.Jack Snyder: Trials and Errors: Principle and Pragmatism in Strategies of International Justice. International Security. 28, 5 44 (2004). 114.Taylor C.: Human agency and language. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge [Cambridgeshire] (1985). 115.Kramer M.H.: The legacy of H.L.A. Hart: legal, political, and moral philosophy. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2008). 116.Wendt A.: The state as person in international theory. Review of International Studies. 30, (2004). 117.French P.A.: Collective and corporate responsibility. Columbia University Press, New York (1984). 118.Isaacs T.L., Vernon R.: Accountability for collective wrong doing. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2011). 119.May L.: The morality of groups: collective responsibility, group-based harm, and corporate rights. University of Notre Dame Press, Notre Dame, Ind (1987). 120.Roht-Arriaza N., Mariezcurrena J.: Transitional justice in the twenty-first century: beyond truth versus justice. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2006). 121.Struett M.J.: The politics of constructing the International Criminal Court: NGOs, discourse, and agency. Palgrave Macmillan, New York (2008). 122.ICC - CPI, http://www.icc-cpi.int/pages/default.aspx. 123.Hutchings K.: Global ethics. Polity, Cambridge (2010). 124.Shue H.: Basic rights: subsistence, affluence and U.S. foreign policy. Princeton University Press, Princeton, N.J. (1996). 125.Pogge T.W.M.: World poverty and human rights: cosmopolitan responsibilities and reforms. Polity, Cambridge (2008). 126.Pogge, Thomas: Are We Violating the Human Rights of the World s Poor. Yale Human Rights & Development Law Journal. 14, (2011). 127.Arendt H.: The origins of totalitarianism. Allen & Unwin, London (1967). 128.Beitz C.R.: Human Rights as a Common Concern. American Political Science Review. 95, 269 282 (2001). 129.Beitz C.R.: The idea of human rights. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2009). 130.Beitz C.R.: The idea of human rights. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2009). 131.Beitz C.R.: The idea of human rights. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2011). 132.Allen Buchanan: The Egalitarianism of Human Rights. Ethics. 120, 679 710 (2010). 133.Donnelly, Jack: Human rights: a new standard of civilization? International Affairs. 74,. 134.Donnelly J.: Human Rights and Social Provision. Journal of Human Rights. 7, 123 138 (2008). 135.Dworkin R.M.: Taking rights seriously. Duckworth, London (1977). 136.Rainer Forst: The Justification of Human Rights and the Basic Right to Justification: A Reflexive Approach*. Ethics. 120, 711 740 (2010). 137.Gewirth A.: The Epistemology of Human Rights. Social Philosophy and Policy. 1, (1984). 138.Gregg B.G.: Human rights as social construction. Cambridge University Press, New York (2011). 139.Griffin J.: On human rights. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2010). 140.Griffin J.: On human rights. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2008). 141.KARP D.J.: The location of 4/7
international practices: what is human rights practice? Review of International Studies. 39, 969 992 (2013). 142.Koch I.E.: Dichotomies, Trichotomies or Waves of Duties? Human Rights Law Review. 5, 81 103 (2005). 143.Langlois A.J.: The narrative metaphysics of human rights. The International Journal of Human Rights. 9, 369 387 (2005). 144.Lauren P.G.: The evolution of international human rights: visions seen. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia (2011). 145.Meckled-Garcia S.: Does the WTO Violate Human Rights (and Do I Help It)? Beyond the Metaphor of Culpability for Systemic Global Poverty. Political Studies. 62, 435 451 (2014). 146.Miller D., Oxford University Press: National responsibility and global justice. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2007). 147.Miller D.: National responsibility and global justice. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2012). 148.Nickel J.W.: Making sense of human rights. Blackwell Pub, Malden, MA (2007). 149.James W. Nickel: How Human Rights Generate Duties to Protect and Provide. Human Rights Quarterly. 15, 77 86 (1993). 150.Pogge T.W.M., Unesco: Freedom from poverty as a human right: who owes what to the very poor? Oxford University Press, Oxford (2007). 151.Besson S., Tasioulas J.: The philosophy of international law. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2010). 152.Reus-Smit C.: Human rights and the social construction of sovereignty. Review of International Studies. 27, (2001). 153.Henry Shue: Mediating Duties. Ethics. 98, 687 704 (1988). 154.Shute S., Hurley S., Amnesty International: On human rights. Basic Books, New York (1993). 155.Whelan D.J.: Indivisible human rights: a history. University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia (2010). 156.Buchanan A.E.: The heart of human rights. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2013). 157.Freeman M.: Human rights: an interdisciplinary approach. Polity Press, Cambridge, UK (2011). 158.International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, http://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/ccpr.aspx. 159.International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, http://www.ohchr.org/en/professionalinterest/pages/cescr.aspx. 160.Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, http://www.ohchr.org/en/hrbodies/cescr/pages/cescrindex.aspx. 161.Miller D.: Distributing Responsibilities. Journal of Political Philosophy. 9, 453 471 (2001). 162.O Neill O.: Agents of Justice. Metaphilosophy. 32, 180 195 (2001). 163.Karp D.J.: Responsibility for human rights: transnational corporations in imperfect states. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2014). 164.Karp D.J.: Responsibility for human rights: transnational corporations in imperfect states. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom (2014). 165.Eriksen S.S., Sending O.J.: There is no global public: the idea of the public and the legitimation of governance. International Theory. 5, 213 237 (2013). 166.Alston P., Academy of European Law, New York University: Non-state actors and human rights. Oxford University Press, Oxford [England] (2005). 167.Barry C.: APPLYING THE CONTRIBUTION PRINCIPLE. Metaphilosophy. 36, 210 227 (2005). 168.Hopgood S.: Keepers of the flame: understanding Amnesty International. Cornell University Press, Ithaca, N.Y. (2006). 169.Karp D.J.: Transnational corporations in bad states : human rights duties, legitimate authority and the rule of law in international political theory. International Theory. 1, (2009). 170.Karp D.J.: Responsibility for human rights: transnational corporations in imperfect states. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2014). 171.Karp D.J.: Responsibility for human rights: transnational corporations in imperfect states. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom (2014). 172.Kolstad I.: Human Rights and Assigned Duties: Implications for Corporations. Human Rights Review. 10, 569 582 (2009). 173.Rasche A., Kell G.: The United Nations global compact: achievements, trends and challenges. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2010). 174.Lu C.: Just and unjust interventions in world politics: public and private / Catherine Lu. Palgrave Macmillan, Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire (2006). 175.Lu C.: Just and unjust 5/7
interventions in world politics: public and private. Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstoke (2011). 176.Meckled-Garcia S.: Do transnational economic effects violate human rights? Ethics & Global Politics. 2, (2009). 177.O Neill O.: Bounds of justice. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2000). 178.Pattison J.: Humanitarian intervention and the responsibility to protect: who should intervene? Oxford University Press, Oxford (2010). 179.Pattison J.: Humanitarian intervention and the responsibility to protect: who should intervene? OUP Oxford, Oxford (2010). 180.Pattison J.: Humanitarian intervention and the responsibility to protect: who should intervene? Oxford University Press, Oxford (2012). 181.Pattison J.: Outsourcing the responsibility to protect: humanitarian intervention and private military and security companies. International Theory. 2, (2010). 182.Pogge T.W.M., Unesco: Freedom from poverty as a human right: who owes what to the very poor? Oxford University Press, Oxford (2007). 183.Ypi L.: Justice and morality beyond naïve cosmopolitanism. Ethics & Global Politics. 3, (2010). 184.Homepage Business & Human Rights Resource Centre, http://business-humanrights.org/. 185.Hutchings K.: Global ethics. Polity, Cambridge (2010). 186.Michael Walzer: The Moral Standing of States: A Response to Four Critics. Philosophy & Public Affairs. 9, 209 229 (1980). 187.Brunstetter, Daniel: The Implications of Drones on the Just War Tradition. Ethics & International Affairs. 25, 337 358. 188.Sullins J.P.: RoboWarfare: can robots be more ethical than humans on the battlefield? Ethics and Information Technology. 12, 263 275 (2010). 189.Bellamy A.J.: Supreme emergencies and the protection of non-combatants in war. International Affairs. 80, 829 850 (2004). 190.Bellamy A.J.: Realizing the Responsibility to Protect. International Studies Perspectives. 10, 111 128 (2009). 191.Bellamy A.J.: Massacres and morality: mass atrocities in an age of civilian immunity. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2012). 192.Bellamy A.J.: Massacres and morality: mass atrocities in an age of civilian immunity. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2012). 193.Bellamy A.J.: Massacres and morality: mass atrocities in an age of civilian immunity. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2012). 194.Blank, Laurie R.: After Top Gun: How Drone Strikes Impact the Law of War. University of Pennsylvania Journal of International Law. 33, (2011). 195.Brown C.: Practical judgement in international political theory: selected essays. Routledge, London (2012). 196.Chandler D.: The Responsibility to Protect? Imposing the Liberal Peace. International Peacekeeping. 11, 59 81 (2004). 197.Chatterjee D.K. ed: The ethics of preventive war. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2013). 198.Enemark C.: Armed drones and the ethics of war: military virtue in a post-heroic age. Taylor and Francis, Hoboken (2013). 199.Elshtain J.B.: Just war against terror: the burden of American power in a violent world. BasicBooks, New York, N.Y. (2004). 200.Evans, Gareth: The Responsibility to Protect. Foreign Affairs. 81, (2002). 201.Johnson J.T.: Morality and contemporary warfare. Yale University Press, New Haven (2001). 202.James Turner Johnson: Maintaining the Protection of Non-Combatants. Journal of Peace Research. 37, 421 448 (2000). 203.Lang A.F., O Driscoll C., Williams J.: Just war: authority, tradition, and practice. Georgetown University Press, Washington, DC (2013). 204.David Luban: The Romance of the Nation-State. Philosophy & Public Affairs. 9, 392 397 (1980). 205.Orend B.: The morality of war. Broadview, Peterborough, Ontario (2013). 206.Roland Paris: Human Security: Paradigm Shift or Hot Air? International Security. 26, 87 102 (2001). 207.PATTISON J.: Justa piratica: the ethics of piracy. Review of International Studies. 1 26 (2013). 208.Igor Primoratz: Michael Walzer s Just War Theory: Some Issues of Responsibility. Ethical Theory and Moral Practice. 5, 221 243 (2002). 209.Sjoberg L.: Gender, justice, and the wars in Iraq: a feminist reformulation of just war theory. Lexington Books, Lanham, MD (2006). 210.Walzer M.: Just and unjust wars: a moral argument with historical illustrations. BasicBooks, New York, N.Y. (2006). 211.Weiss T.G.: The Sunset of Humanitarian Intervention? The Responsibility to Protect in a Unipolar Era. 6/7
Security Dialogue. 35, 135 153 (2004). 212.Wheeler N.J., Oxford University Press: Saving strangers: humanitarian intervention in international society. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2002). 213.Wheeler N.J.: Saving strangers: humanitarian intervention in international society. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2000). 214.Arnold Wolfers: National Security as an Ambiguous Symbol. Political Science Quarterly. 67, 481 502 (1952). 215.Bellamy A.J.: Just wars: from Cicero to Iraq. Polity, Cambridge (2006). 216.Hutchings K.: Global ethics. Polity, Cambridge (2010). 7/7