Cosmopolitan peace /

Cécile Fabre presents the first major statement of key moral principles which should be followed when ending wars. She defends restitutive and reparative justice, punishment of war criminals, transitional administrations, and deployment of peacekeeping and occupation forces. She outlines practices t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fabre, Cécile (Author)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Oxford : Oxford University Press, 2016.
Subjects:
Online Access:Connect to the full text of this electronic book
Table of Contents:
  • Cover; Cosmopolitan Peace; Copyright; Dedication; Acknowledgements; Contents; 1: Cosmopolitanism and War; 1.1. Introduction; 1.2. Cosmopolitan Justice; 1.3. Cosmopolitan War; 1.4. Jus Post Belum in the Just War Tradition; 1.5. Thinking About Peace After War; 1.5.1. Just Peace v. Justified ATC Peace; 1.5.2. Jus Ad Bellum, Jus In Bello, Jus Ex Bello, and Jus Post Bellum: Mapping the Relationship; 1.6. Overview of the Book; 2: Ending Wars; 2.1. INTRODUCTION; 2.2. ENDING WARS AND THE QUESTION OF AUTHORITY; 2.3. ENDING JUST WARS; 2.3.1. Just Cause and Reasonable Chance of Success.
  • 2.3.2. Proportionality; 2.3.3. Discrimination; 2.3.4. How to End an Initially Just War: Suing for Peace, or Surrendering?; 2.3.5. To Whom is the Duty Owed?; 2.4. ENDING UNJUST WARS; 2.4.1. Ending an Unjust War: Conditional v. Unconditional Surrender; 2.4.2. Acquiring Justifications for Continuing with an Initially Unjust War; 2.5. CONCLUSION; 3: Peacekeeping and Military Occupation; 3.1. INTRODUCTION; 3.2. PEACEKEEPING; 3.3. MILITARY OCCUPATION; 3.3.1. Just and Unjust Wars, Just and Unjust Occupations; From a Just War To a Just Occupation; The Problem of Innocent Civilians.
  • From an Unjust War to an Unjust Occupation, From an Unjust to a Justified Occupation; When To Stay, When To Leave; 3.3.2. Who Can Occupy? The Problem of Competent Authority; 3.3.3. Rights, Competences, and Duties of Occupying Forces; 3.3.4. Rights and Duties of Occupied Populations; On the Duty To Comply with an Unjust Occupier's Directives; Engaging with an Unjust Occupier: Cooperation and Collaboration; 3.4. CONCLUSION; 4: Peace Agreements; 4.1. INTRODUCTION; 4.2. ON THE DUTY TO COMPLY WITH PEACE AGREEMENTS; 4.2.1. What Peace Agreements Do: Declarative, Specifying, and Creative Functions.
  • 4.2.2. Complying with Declarative Clauses; 4.2.3. Complying with Creative Clauses; 4.2.4. Complying with Specifying Clauses; 4.3. PEACE AGREEMENTS AND PROCEDURAL JUSTICE; 4.3.1. The Question of Authority; 4.3.2. Fraud, Corruption, and Coercion; 4.4. CONCLUSION; 5: Restitution; 5.1. INTRODUCTION; 5.2. OWNERSHIP, OCCUPANCY, AND SOVEREIGNTY RIGHTS; 5.2.1. Justifying Ownership, Occupancy, and Sovereignty Rights; 5.2.2. Restitution: The Basics; 5.3. RETURNING MOVEABLE PROPERTY; 5.4. RETURNING TERRITORY; 5.5. POPULATION DISPLACEMENTS: EXPULSIONS AND RETURNS; 5.6. CONCLUSION.
  • 6: Reparations, Distribution, and Reconstruction; 6.1. INTRODUCTION; 6.2. REPARATIONS; 6.2.1. Reparations for What, and How Much?; 6.2.2. Reparations to Whom?; 6.2.3. Who Should Pay and Why?; A First Cut: The Fault Principle; Five Complications: Refining the Fault Principle; A Second Cut: The No-Unjust-Benefit Principle; More Comments on Fault and No-Unjust-Benefit; 6.3. THE RECONSTRUCTION PRINCIPLE: FILLING THE GAPS OF REPARATIONS, BRINGING ABOUT DISTRIBUTIVE JUSTICE; 6.3.1. Setting out the Reconstruction Principle; 6.3.2. Reconstruction and Conditional Aid.