• Subscribe
  • Twitter
Ethics & International Affairs
  • About
  • Submissions
  • Online Exclusives
  • Interviews
  • EIA BLOG
  • Past Issues
    • Past Issues in Print
    • Special Collections
  • Themes
    • Global Governance
    • Environment, Climate Change, Sustainability
    • Migration
    • Development, Inequality, and Poverty
    • The Ethics of War and Peace
    • International Law and Human Rights

Tag: military

On Law, Policy, and (Not) Bombing Syria

On Law, Policy, and (Not) Bombing Syria

Ian Hurd | September 2013

The question of whether the US should use its military against Assad is separate from the questions of legal interpretation. The legal question does not address the likely consequences of the use of force.

Read More

Popular Recent Posts

  • Black Lives Matter: Taking Stock of An International Moment
  • Measuring Morality in Foreign Policy: Joseph…
  • Revisiting the Ethical Calculus: Which Obligations…
  • Deconstructing the Narratives of the Interim…
  • What We’ve Been Reading

RSS Carnegie Council Resources

  • Global Ethics Review: "Homo Empathicus" & the Pandemic, with Alexander Görlach
  • The Doorstep: The New Space Race with The Washington Post's Christian Davenport
  • Are Americans Facing an Undemocratic Future?
  • Africa, Artificial Intelligence, & Ethics
  • 2034: A Novel of the Next World War, with Admiral James Stavridis & Elliott Ackerman

Privacy Policy |

The views and opinions expressed in the media, comments, or publications on this website are those of the speakers or authors and do not necessarily reflect or represent the views and opinions held by Carnegie Council.

Ethics & International Affairs

© 2021 Ethics & International Affairs. All rights reserved.