RSSIssue 27.4

Why We Need a Just Rebellion Theory

| January 6, 2014
Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Because these two influential streams of thought are in such tension with each other, our thinking about rebellion in the West tends to be piecemeal, driven more by gut reactions than by philosophical reasoning and careful political analysis. As a result, our responses to rebellion are scattered, unpredictable, and unfortunately often tragically misplaced.

Read More

Christian Just War Reasoning and Two Cases of Rebellion: Ireland 1916–1921 and Syria 2011–Present

| January 6, 2014
Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Christian just war reasoning is conservative in its recognition that peaceful order is basic to all other forms of human flourishing, and so should not be disturbed needlessly. Nevertheless, it is morally critical in its awareness that sometimes peaceful order can be tyrannical or repressive to an extent that should not be borne.

Read More

Muslim Discourse on Rebellion

| January 6, 2014
Print Friendly, PDF & Email

Within Islamic thought, the judgments pertaining to rebels–known as ahkam al-bughat–constitute a subset of the larger category of “judgments pertaining to armed struggle,” or ahkam al-jihad.

Read More

<i data-lazy-src=
<i data-lazy-src=

The Ethical Imperative of Curbing Corporate Tax Avoidance

| January 6, 2014
Print Friendly, PDF & Email

If the future of human rights is dependent on the capacity of the state to fulfill them, then one must focus on how the private sector interfaces with public values.

Read More