Cecile 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 to foster trust and improve prospects for peace.
Cecile 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 to foster trust and improve prospects for peace.
Cécile Fabre is a Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford, and Professor of Political Philosophy at the University of Oxford. She has written extensively on distributive justice, rights, democracy, and the ethics of war. She has previously published three monographs with Oxford University Press (Social Rights under the Constitution (2000), Whose Body is it Anyway? (2006), Cosmopolitan War (2012). She is a Fellow of the British Academy.
Inhaltsangabe
1: Cosmopolitanism and War 2: Ending Wars 3: Peacekeeping and Military Occupation 4: Peace Agreements 5: Restitution 6: Reparations, Distribution, and Reconstruction 7: Punishment 8: Transitional Foreign Administrations 9: Reconciliation 10: Remembrance