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Most Emailed Pages
1. Rape and Gender Violence: From Impunity to Accountability in International Law
2. On the Morality of Immigration [Full Text]
3. The Successes and Failures of UN Intervention in East Timor
4. ROUNDTABLE: The Nation-State
5. Public Diplomacy and the 2008 Election
 
   
     
 

Ethics & International Affairs, Volume 16.1 (Spring 2002)

 
     
 
Ethics & International Affairs, Volume 16.1
$15.00
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Roundtable
 
The New War: What Rules Apply? [Full Text] - 04/13/02
The authors discuss the political, moral, cultural, and legal aspects of the United States' response to the attacks of September 11.
Author(s): Richard A. Falk, Ruth Wedgwood, William L. Nash, Fawaz A. Gerges, George A. Lopez
 
 
Articles
 
Comprehending "Evil": Challenges for Law and Policy [Abstract] - 05/02/02
The article focuses on the Bush Administration’s attempts to frame its policy around this term in the current campaign against terrorism, and recent uses of the term in the growing literature on war crimes, genocide, and domestic repression.
Author(s): Douglas Klusmeyer, Astri Suhrke
 
 
Corporate Codes of Conduct and the Success of Globalization [Abstract] - 05/02/02
Sethi focuses on multinational corporations (MNCs) in developing countries and the unfair advantage they have in expropriating a greater share of gains from efficiency and productivity from international trade than would be possible if labor had greater mobility or bargaining power.
Author(s): S. Prakash Sethi
 
 
Justice after War [Full Text] - 05/02/02
Drawing on the concepts and values of the just war tradition, this article presents an account of jus post bellum as applied to the Persian Gulf War, Bosnia and Kosovo, and the war against terrorism in Afghanistan.
Author(s): Brian Orend
 
 
NGO Strategies for Promoting Corporate Social Responsibility [Abstract] - 05/02/02
Winston evaluates strategies that have been used by international human rights nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) in attempts to influence the behavior of multinational corporations (MNCs).
Author(s): Morton Winston
 
 
The Moral Basis of Humanitarian Intervention [Abstract] - 05/02/02
Nardin examines the moral principles underlying the idea of humanitarian intervention from the perspective of international law and from that of the natural law tradition.
Author(s): Terry Nardin
 
 
Debate: Global Poverty Relief
 
More Than Charity: Cosmopolitan Alternatives to the "Singer Solution" [Full Text] - 05/02/02
Contrary to Singer’s view, Kuper asserts that there is no "royal road" to poverty relief, but intersecting roads that may take us to a place without poverty. Drawing on the works of Rawls and Marx, Kuper examines how an effective political philosophy of this kind might be developed.
Author(s): Andrew Kuper
 
 
Poverty, Facts, and Political Philosophies: Response to "More Than Charity" [Full Text] - 05/02/02
In response to Kuper's article Singer writes, " I show that his counter-examples are often irrelevant to what I am advocating, and he has not substantiated his extraordinary claim that the approach I advocate would 'seriously harm the poor'."
Author(s): Peter Singer
 
 
Facts, Theories, and Hard Choices: Reply to Peter Singer [Full Text] - 05/02/02
In response to Singer Kuper suggests that only a wider range of institutional reforms and political strategies can generate sustained inclusion in governance and the global economy.
Author(s): Andrew Kuper
 
 
Achieving the Best Outcome: Final Rejoinder [Full Text] - 05/02/02
Singer responds to Andrew Kuper: "I reiterate the central ethical claim of my argument and argue that, if we don’t know how to make deep structural changes that will end desperate poverty, it is still better to help some people rather than none."
Author(s): Peter Singer
 
 
Review Essay
 
Global Governance and Genocide in Rwanda [Full Text] - 04/22/02
Lang writes: "Read together, [these books] make a fairly convincing case that the UN was indeed responsible for failing to stop the genocide in Rwanda."
Author(s): Anthony F. Lang, Jr.
 

ADDITIONAL CONTENT



REVIEW ESSAYS

Democracy, Diversity, and Boundaries
P.E. Digeser

Third Worldism Redux
Paige Arthur

RECENT BOOKS ON ETHICS AND INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS

Human Rights as Politics and Idolatry, Michael Ignatieff, Amy Gutmann ed.
REVIEWED BY DAVID PETRASEK

In Our Own Best Interest: How Defending Human Rights Benefits Us All, William F. Schulz
REVIEWED BY JAMES W. NICKEL

The Graves Are Not Yet Full: Race, Tribe and Power in the Heart of Africa, Bill Berkeley
REVIEWED BY LYDIA TOMITOVA

Explorations in African Political Thought, Teodros Kiros
REVIEWED BY LESTER P. LEE, JR.

Breakthrough International Negotiations, Michael Watkins and Susan Rosegrant
REVIEWED BY COLETTE MAZZUCELLI

Multilateralism and U.S. Foreign Policy: Ambivalent Engagement, Stewart Patrick and Shepard Forman, eds.
REVIEWED BY JOHN L. WASHBURN

Governing for the Environment: Global Problems, Ethics and Democracy, Brendan Gleeson and Nicholas Low, eds.
REVIEWED BY VIVIAN BERTRAND

Boundaries and Allegiances, Samuel Sheffler
REVIEWED BY CHRISTIAN BARRY



 
 

About the Journal

The Carnegie Council's flagship publication, Ethics & International Affairs is an interdisciplinary resource for scholars, students, and policy analysts concerned with the moral dimensions of global issues. The journal covers global justice, civil society, democratization, international law, intervention, sanctions, and related topics.

SUBSCRIPTIONS
To subscribe to Ethics & International Affairs, or to purchase individual issues and articles, go to Blackwell Publishing.

RESPONSES
The Editors welcome responses to Features and Essays published in Ethics & International Affairs. To be considered for publication, responses should be no longer than one thousand words, including endnotes (which should be kept to a minimum). Responses are not peer-reviewed, and are published at the Editors' discretion. All responses are subject to editing for length and style. In the event of any questions or substantive editing, the response will be returned to the author for final approval prior to publication. Responses are published online, alongside the article they address.

 
 

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