Fabre’s Crusade for Justice: Why We Should Not Join [Book Review]

Law and Philosophy 33 (3):337-360 (2014)
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Abstract

Cosmopolitan War is characterized by a tension between moral demandingness and moral permissiveness. On the one hand, Fabre is strongly committed to the value of each and all human beings as precious individuals whose value does not depend on their national or other affiliation. This commitment leads to serious constraints on what may be done to others in both individual and national self-defense. Yet the book is also unambiguously permissive. It opens the gate to far more wars than traditional just war theory would ever permit, in particular to what Fabre has dubbed ‘subsistence wars’, and it rejects the most fundamental constraint imposed by traditional jus in bello, namely, the prohibition against the deliberate killing of civilians. While both the demanding and the permissive aspects of the book seem troublesome to me, the latter seem more so and most of my paper is devoted to a critical examination of them. In the last part of the paper, I point to a different outlook to the one defended in the book and try to show that this outlook is less foreign to Fabre’s outlook than one might expect

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Daniel Statman
University of Haifa

Citations of this work

Just War Theory: Revisionists Vs Traditionalists.Seth Lazar - 2017 - Annual Review of Political Science 20:37-54.
De oorlog in de theorie van de rechtvaardige oorlog.Lonneke Peperkamp - 2019 - Algemeen Nederlands Tijdschrift voor Wijsbegeerte 111 (1):63-94.
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References found in this work

National self-determination.Avishai Margalit & Joseph Raz - 1990 - Journal of Philosophy 87 (9):439-461.
The ethics of killing in war.Jeff McMahan - 2006 - Philosophia 34 (1):693-733.
The Ethics of Killing in War.Jeff McMahan - 2006 - Philosophia 34 (1):23-41.
The war convention and the moral division of labour.Yitzhak Benbaji - 2009 - Philosophical Quarterly 59 (237):593-617.

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