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Home > Resources > Ethics & International Affairs Journal |
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This issue features Tim Hayward on human rights versus emission rights; Richard Vernon on duties towards compatriots; Andrew F. March on Tariq Ramadan; Thomas Diez on Turkey and the EU; Scott Snyder on religious NGOs in North Korea; Brian Orend on the Just War tradition; and reviews on books of interest.
Author(s):
Tim Hayward
Richard Vernon
Andrew F. March
Thomas Diez
Scott Snyder
Brian Orend
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Yvonne Terlingen of Amnesty International discusses the Human Rights Council; Adam Branch on Uganda and the politics of ICC intervention; Thomas Hurka of the University of Toronto, on liability and just cause; Luis Cabrera of Arizona State University, on global governance and transnational democracy; Anthony Lang, Jr. of the University of St. Andrews, Scotland, on holding states accountable; plus a variety of book reviews.
Author(s):
Adam Branch
Luis Cabrera
Thomas Hurka
Anthony F. Lang, Jr.
Yvonne Terlingen
Marcus A. Roberts
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This issue contains a Special Section on Citizenship and Equality in which Devesh Kapur and John McHale examine the problem of brain drain; Will Kymlicka and Keith Banting argue that ethnic diversity and pro-multiculturalism policies pose no danger to the the welfare state; and James A. Goldston examines the nexus between racial discrimination and citizenship status. This issue also features a symposium on Larry May's important new work on the ethics of war crimes tribunals. The symposium features contributions from David Luban, Jamie Mayerfeld, and Andrew Altman and a response by May.
Author(s):
Will Kymlicka
Keith Banting
Devesh Kapur
John McHale
James A. Goldston
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Kenneth A. Rodman explains that critics and supporters of the ICC both overstate their cases. In reality, prosecutions will be guided by both political prudence and the rule of law. Political prudence should also play a role in the reform of development aid accountability, argues Leif Wenar. Plus, a special section on justice after war examines issues of lustration, secession, and accountability and global governance in postwar Iraq.
Author(s):
Richard Caplan
Leif Wenar
Kenneth A. Rodman
Margaret Moore
Joy Gordon
Jens Meierhenrich
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