INSTITUTIONALIZING THE JUST WAR? A CRITICAL COMMENT ON BUCHANAN; 382-402

(Full text in pdf format)

 

Lars Vinx

 

Bilkent University, Turkey

 

Abstract. I will argue that Buchanan’s argument against the principle that war is permissible only in response to an actual or imminent attack rests on a mistaken under­standing of the nature and purpose of the JWN. Buchanan abstracts from the fact that the JWN is not just a moral principle but also a legal rule and, as such, part of an already existing institutionalized system for the regulation of the use of force. Due to this abstrac­tion, he fails to take into account the JWN’s role as a fundamental constitutional principle in an already existing society of equal states committed to the values of peace and equality among states. It follows that Buchanan’s own argument is arbitrarily incomplete since it mistakenly reduces the JWN to a mere safeguard against miscalculation and manipulation in an imaginary state of nature.

 

Keywords: Allen Buchanan, aggressive war, just war, preventive self-defence, forcible democratization, use of force, legal peace, institutional context

 

 

 

References

 

Buchanan, Allen (2003) “Reforming the international law of humanitarian intervention”. In Humanitarian intervention. Ethical, legal, and political dilemmas, 130–173. J. L. Holzgrefe and Robert L. Keohane, eds. Cambridge: CambridgeUniversity Press.

Buchanan, Allen and Robert L. Keohane (2004) “The preventive use of force”. Ethics and Inter­national Affairs 18, 1–22.
doi:10.1111/j.1747-7093.2004.tb00447.x

Buchanan, Allen (2004a) Justice, legitimacy, and self-determination. Moral foundations for inter­national law. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Buchanan, Allen (2006) “Institutionalizing the just war”. Philosophy and Public Affairs 34, 2–38.
doi:10.1111/j.1088-4963.2006.00051.x

Byers, Michael and Simon Chesterman (2004) “Changing the rules about rules? Unilateral humanitarian intervention and the future of international law”. Humanitarian intervention. Ethical, legal, and political dilemmas, 177–203. J. L. Holzgrefe and  Robert L. Keohane, eds. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Hobbes, Thomas (1991) Leviathan. Richard Tuck, ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Kimminich, Otto (1997) Einführung in das Völkerrecht. Tübingen und Basel: Francke.

Lee, Steven (2006) “A moral critique of the cosmopolitan institutional proposal”. Ethics & Inter­national Affairs 20, 99–107.

Locke, John (1967) Two treatises of government. Peter Laslett, ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Mill, John Stewart (1859) “A few words on nonintervention”. In Essays on equality, law, and education, 109–124. (Collected Works of John Stewart Mill, 21.) J. M. Robson, ed. Toronto: TorontoUniversity Press.

Rawls, John (1999) The law of peoples. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press