Article(electronic)March 3, 2022

The Responsibility to Protect from Terror: The Ethics of Foreign Counter-terrorist Interventions

In: Global responsibility to protect: GR2P, Volume 14, Issue 2, p. 155-177

Checking availability at your location

Abstract

Abstract
The use of military force abroad is a significant part of some states' counter-terrorist efforts. Can these operations be ethically justified? This paper considers whether the underlying principles that philosophers have put forward to justify humanitarian interventions (which may underlie the international norm of the responsibility to protect (R2P)) can also give support for foreign counter-terrorist interventions of this sort. While it finds that the limits to international action that are imposed by the need to respect state sovereignty do not rule out counter-terrorist interventions, it urges caution in supporting an international norm permitting them. Because such a norm would be open to manipulation and abuse, it may be preferable to discourage appealing to it in order to justify military counter-terrorism.

Publisher

Brill

ISSN: 1875-984X

DOI

10.1163/1875-984x-14010013

Report Issue

If you have problems with the access to a found title, you can use this form to contact us. You can also use this form to write to us if you have noticed any errors in the title display.