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The basis of this collection of essays is the reading of a common topic from different perspectives. The contributors compare and contrast not only positions, but also methods of learning. They examine theories of just war in diverse cultural contexts and their disciplinary settings.
List of contents
Preface
INTRODUCTION
1. Should We Justify War?
Roger Berkowitz
Bard College
JUST WAR IN THE HISTORY OF RELIGIONS
2. Justice and Justifications: War Theory among the Ancient Greeks
Carolyn Dewald
Bard College
3. Religion, Ritual and War in the Late Roman Republic
Robert M. Berchman
Dowling College
4. The Wars of Yahweh: Biblical Views of Just War
Baruch A. Levine
New York University
5. Just War in Classical Judaism
Jacob Neusner
Bard College
6. Christianity in War
Bruce Chilton
Bard College
7. Jihad in Classical Islamic Legal and Moral Thought
Mairaj Syed
Bard College
8. Just War in Buddhism
Kristn Scheible
Bard College
9. Reflections on War and Dharma in Classical Hindiuism
Richard Davis
Bard College
JUST WAR: CASES IN CONTEMPORARY CONTEXT
10. Fighting the Good Fight
R. E. Tully
United States Military Academy, West Point
11. Jus ad Bellum and the Islamic Reformation
Mark David Welton
United States Military Academy, West Point
12. Fighting Wars Justly: The Legal and Moral Concerns and Consequences of Private Military and Security Contractors in Modern Armed Conflicts
David A. Wallace
United States Military Academy, West Point
13. The Duty of Moral Diligence: The Responsibility of Soldiers to Determine the Justness of War
Brian Imiola
United States Military Academy, West Point
14. Just War Theory, Choice and Necess ity and Israel's Resp onses to Genocidal Threats: An Evidence-Based Approach
Elihu D Richter, Yael Stein, Tamar Pileggi
Genocide Prevention Program Hebrew University-Hadassssah School of Public Health and Community Medicine
15. A Anticipation in Walzer's Just War Theory: The Example of Israel's 1967 First Strike in the Light of Historical Evidence
Joel Perlmann
Bard College
CONCLUSION
16. The Matter of Motive: Concluding Thoughts on Just War Theory
William Scott Green
University of Miami
About the author
Edited by Jacob Neusner; Bruce D. Chilton and R. E. Tully
Summary
The basis of this collection of essays is the reading of a common topic from different perspectives. The contributors compare and contrast not only positions, but also methods of learning. They examine theories of just war in diverse cultural contexts and their disciplinary settings.