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Violence, Identity, and Self-Determination

Stanford University Press (1997)

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  1. Climate justice without freedom: Assessing legal and political responses to climate change and forced migration.Tracey Skillington - 2015 - European Journal of Social Theory 18 (3):288-307.
    Storm surges, flooding, heatwaves, and prolonged drought, as ever more regular features of life under deteriorating climate conditions, are unmistakably violent. Their effects on the lives of vulnerable human populations and ecosystems across the world are widely known to be devastating. Yet a legal order that denies the victims of such ecological persecution safe haven, no matter how great its use of force (e.g., detention, arrest, forced return) cannot, by definition, be violent. The power of law, used to protect states’ (...)
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  • The Pharmacotic War on Terrorism.Larry N. George - 2002 - Theory, Culture and Society 19 (4):161-186.
    The Greek words `pharmakon' and `pharmakos' allude to the complex relations between political violence and the health or disorder of the body politic. This article explores analogies of war as disease and contagion, and contrasts these with metaphors of war as politically healthy and medicinal - as in Randolph Bourne's notion of war as `the health of the state'. It then applies these to the unfolding US `War on Terrorism' through the concept of `pharmacotic war', by way of examining the (...)
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  • Making bowels move: Justice without the limits of reason alone.Paul Fletcher - 2000 - Cultural Values 4 (2):228-238.
    This paper responds to the violence inherent in modern ‘formal’ conceptions of justice which sever the ‘cultural’ from the ‘political’. As a counterpoint to this dominant rendering of justice the paper explores an alternate justice whose character is typified by the disposition and exigencies of the viscera.
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  • Kant on Just War and ‘Unjust Enemies’: Reflections on a ‘Pleonasm’.Susan Meld Shell - 2005 - Kantian Review 10:82-111.
    The following remarks are intended to help clarify Kant's position on international right and, specifically, the so-called ‘right of war’. They are part of a more general study of Kant's politics; but I also make them here in the hope that Kant's view of international law can furnish us with some much-needed practical help and guidance. More specifically, I will try to show that Kant is less averse to the use of force, including resort to pre-emptive war, and far more (...)
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