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  1. The morality of sanctions.James Pattison - 2015 - Social Philosophy and Policy 32 (1):192-215.
    Abstract:Economic sanctions have been subject to extensive criticism. They are often seen as indiscriminate, intending the harms that they inflict, and using the suffering of the innocent as a means to enact policy change. Indeed, some reject outright the permissibility of economic sanctions. By contrast, in this essay, I defend the case for economic sanctions. I argue that sanctions are not necessarily morally problematic and, in doing so, argue that sanctions are less morally problematic than is often claimed. I go (...)
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  • Global justice in the shadow of security threats.Yuchun Kuo - 2019 - Critical Review of International Social and Political Philosophy 22 (7):884-905.
    Do a threatened state’s obligations of assistance extend to the enemy’s needy people and the needy people in non-hostile countries equally? This paper examines five arguments defending the political boundary between hostile and non-hostile countries. The aid workers, defence capacity, and pre-emptive self-defence arguments highlight the unreasonable burdens for a threatened state to protect its own citizens, as a result of its assistance to the enemy’s needy people, while the limited and comprehensive negative duties arguments underscore a threatened state’s involvement (...)
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  • Currency Warfare and Just War: The Ethics of Targeting Currencies in War.Ricardo Crespo - 2020 - Journal of Military Ethics 19 (1):2-19.
    Is Currency Warfare defined as, the use of monetary or military force directed against an enemy’s monetary power as part of a military campaign, a just way to fight a war? This article explores the...
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