Issue No 12, October 2018



THE JUST WAR NEWSLETTER
Issue No. 12, October 2018


CONTENTS

1. Introduction
2. Conferences and Events
3. Recent Publications
4. Calls for Papers
5. Academic Programs and Projects  
6. Internet Resources 

 
1. INTRODUCTION

The Just War Newsletter is an electronic publication to announce new developments for scholars, teachers and practitioners whose work involves just war theory. Written and published by Michael Kocsis, it serves anyone working in academia, the public service, non-governmental organizations, and the military.

If you wish to be added to the mailing list, contact us at msk3@queensu.ca Back-issues are found on the WWW at: http://thejustwarnewsletter.blogspot.ca/

 
2. CONFERENCES AND EVENTS

An event entitled “The Intellectual Lives of Hugo Grotius: Texts, Contexts and Controversies across the Disciplines” took place from May 4-6th at Princeton University. The organizers were Russ Leo and Mogens Lærke. Participants included Sarah Rivett, Steven Nadler, Feisal Mohamed, Yaacob Dweck, Henk Nellen, Sarah Mortimer, Rhodri Lewis. Eric Nelson, Julie Saada, Nigel Smith, Jan Bloemendal, Jane Raisch, Frédéric Gabriel, Sophie Gee, Mary Nyquist and Sharon Achinstein.

An international workshop on “Democratic Institutions and Future Generations” took place on May 10th at the Centre for the Study of Democracy (CSD), University of Westminster. The event was based on scholarly papers by Simon Caney, Henrike Knappe, Michael Mackenzie, Maija Setälä and Graham Smith, each exploring the theory or practice of democratic traditions and institutions over intergenerational time.

The Tarello Institute for Legal Philosophy hosted a seminar on “Justice and International Law” at the University of Genoa on May 18th. Timothy Endicott and Mario Krešić were primary speakers, and Riccardo Guastini, Pierluigi Chiassoni, Giovanni Ratti, Cristina Redondo and Mauro Barberis were discussants. 

From August 22-25th, the European Consortium for Political Research (ECPR) General Conference took place at the University of Hamburg. The topic was “Kant on Political Change: Global Challenges” and the convenors were Howard Williams and Sorin Baiasu.

A workshop on “Modern Warfare and the Just War Tradition” was held on September 10th in Manchester as part of the MANCEPT Workshops in Political Theory series. The organizer was Joseph Tarquin Foulkes Roberts. The workshop explored a range of contemporary themes including remote and autonomous weapons, cyber-warfare, insurgencies, political and legal “fighting”, targeted killings, revolutions, rebellions, terrorism, and guerrilla warfare.

A workshop on “Legitimate Injustice and Just Resistance” was held from September 10-12th at the University of Manchester, also as part of the MANCEPT series. Its convenor was Aart van Gils. Questions like the following were on the agenda: Can a state or society commit legitimate injustices? What is the appropriate response to perpetrated legitimate injustices? Does “structural legitimate injustice” render a state unjust? What are necessary or sufficient conditions for illegitimacy and injustice?

The 31st Annual Conference of Concerned Philosophers for Peace will take place at the University of Colorado, Boulder from October 18-20th. The event is supported by the University of Colorado’s Center for Values and Social Policy and its keynote speaker will be Alison Jaggar. This year’s theme will be “Economic Justice and Positive Peace”. Questions about the event can be sent to David Boersema at boersema@pacificu.edu.

An international workshop on “Infrastructures of Injustice: Law and Conflict” will take place October 26-27th at St Edmund's College (University of Cambridge) as part of the Cambridge-Singapore-Princeton Network Workshop series. The workshop’s purpose is to explore interrelationships between social structures and injustice through material, conceptual, ethical, and affective relationships. For detailed information, contact Sandra Brunnegger, St Edmund’s College, University of Cambridge, United Kingdom; email: b529@cam.ac.uk

A workshop on “Honour and Admiration after War and Conflict” will take place at Stockholm University from January 30-31, 2019. The organizers are Alfred Archer and Benjamin Matheson. The event is funded by the Society of Applied Philosophy and the Stockholm Centre for the Ethics of War and Peace. Questions such as the following will be explored: What are the moral objections to admiring political leaders who have committed wrongful acts? Do morally wrong actions undermine a leader’s “admirability”? Must honouring express admiration? Do statues and other artefacts necessarily express admiration for those they depict? How should we represent controversial historical figures? What are the norms that govern expressions of the positive emotions? Questions should be sent via email to Benjamin Matheson at the following email address: benjamin.matheson@philosophy.su.se

An International Conference on “Peace and Reconciliation in Global Times” will be hosted from July 30-31st, 2019 at Pakistan’s University of Karachi. Those interested in participating should send a 300w summary of the proposed presentation and a C.V. to Abdul Rashid [hazara9@yahoo.com] before March 30. Completed papers will be considered for inclusion in the publication series “Cultural Heritage and Contemporary Change”. Questions about the event should be sent to: Abdul Rashid at the email address above, and Zeenat Haroon, Department of Qur’aan and Sunnah, University of Karachi, zeenatharoon@yahoo.com  Conference information is posted on the following event website: http://www.crvp.org/conferences/2019/Karachi.html

 A number of sessions at the 54th International Congress on Medieval Studies, taking place this May 2019 at Western Michigan University, will focus on “The Medieval Tradition of Natural Law: War and Peace in Medieval Thought”. The sessions will consider a question that has engaged philosophers for centuries—what constitutes a just war?—and will explore the question through the writings of both Thomas Aquinas and a recent book by Gregory Reichberg, Thomas Aquinas on War and Peace. Proposals from potential presenters will be accepted by Harvey Brown at the email address below until Sept.21st. Inquiries about these meetings should be directed to the session’s main contact, Harvey Brown, via email (hbrown2@uwo.ca) or telephone (519-672-0653).


The Jean Beer Blumenfeld Center for Ethics will host a conference from April 11-12th 2019 at Georgia State University on “Humanistic Perspectives on Moral Injury”. On some accounts, moral injury is a form of personal trauma one may suffer after participating in, or witnessing, acts that challenge deep values. This event will be a venue for research by humanities scholars whose work attempts to theorize this understanding of moral injury. Scheduled speakers include Ed Barrett, Saba Bazargan-Forward, Rita Nakashima Brock, Neta C. Crawford, Joseph Galloway, Linda Radzik, Nancy Sherman and David Rodin. Those interested in participating should send an email containing the names, contact information and paper titles for all proposed session speakers; a pdf or MS Word file (suitable for blind review) with a title and 250-500w abstract. Send the submission to Lauren Michelle Cooper at lcooper14@gsu.edu prior to November 6th. For other inquiries, contact Andrew I. Cohen aicohen@gsu.edu or visit the following website: https://ethics.gsu.edu/2018/09/07/call-for-papers-conference-on-moral-injury/

An upcoming conference entitled “Francisco Suárez: Predecessors & Successors” will be held from April 26-27th 2019 at Loyola University Chicago’s Water Tower campus downtown. The two-day event will bring together worldwide scholars to examine how Suárez revives elements of scholasticism and anticipates the work of later philosophers. Confirmed participants include Brian Embry, Helen Hattab, Sydney Penner, Kara Richardson, Tad Schmaltz, and Christopher Shields. Peter Hartman and Kristen Irwin are the conference co-organizers. Visit the following conference website http://suarezconference2019.sites.luc.edu to obtain current information.

The 9th Workshop on Military Medical Ethics, organized by the International Committee for Medical Medicine (ICMM) Center of Reference for Education on International Humanitarian Law and Ethics, the Medical Services Directorate of the Swiss Armed Forces, and the Zurich Center for Military Medical Ethics, will take place from May 19-24th in Basel (Switzerland) at the Congress Center Basel. The topic is “Ethics of Dealing with Risks in Military Medicine”. Presentations, including reports from the field, case studies, philosophical papers and legal analyses, will cover numerous dimensions of the workshop’s topic. The deadline for submissions has passed, but information about the event and how one might register can be found in the following CFP document: https://melac.ch/images/PDF/Lili2019/LILI2019-CfP_RISK.pdf

A conference entitled “War Machine, Conflict, Coexistence” will be held as the 7th International Conference on Deleuze/Guattari Studies in Asia. The event will take place at the University of Tokyo from June 21-23 2019 and will explore the dynamics of the concept of “war machine”. Keynote speakers will include Ian Buchanan, Anne Sauvagnargues, Gregory Flaxman, Alfonso Lingis, Alexander Galloway and Felicity Colman. Those interested in presenting at the conference should submit an abstract between 150-200w prior to Dec 31st to the following mail address: deleuzetokyo2019@gmail.com

A workshop organized by PluriCourts in 2019 will focus on “The Political and Legal Theory of International Courts and Tribunals: Multilevel Separation of Authority” from June 24-26th at the University of Oslo. The workshop will bring together scholars of philosophy, political theory and legal theory whose research encompasses one or more regional or international courts and tribunals. A major topic will be multi-level ‘horizontal’ and ‘vertical’ separation of authority and questions concerning individual autonomy. Scholars interested in participating should submit an abstract of less than 400w to the website below. Send other questions via email to: Victoria Skeie (victoria.skeie@jus.uio.no). https://www.jus.uio.no/pluricourts/english/news-and-events/news/2018/workshop-on-the-political-and-legal-theory-of-inte.html 

An event on “Cultural Heritage and the Ethics of War” will take place at Homerton College, Cambridge, from September 18-19th, 2019. The event will explore the moral value of cultural heritage and how one ought to conceptualize such values in the broader context of the ethics of war. Keynote papers will be given by Simon Blackburn, Ruth Chang, and Victor Tadros. Paper proposals (in the form of 800w abstracts) are welcome and should be sent via email to Joshua Thomas (joshua.thomas@open.ac.uk) before January 14th. Full details can be found on the following conference website: https://www.heritageinwar.com/conference-on


3. RECENT PUBLICATIONS

Books (US$)

Armitage, David (2017) Civil Wars: A History in Ideas (Knopf) $17.96

Brunstetter, Daniel R. and Cian O’Driscoll (eds) (2017) Just War Thinkers: From Cicero to the 21st Century (Routledge) $42.70 

Carnahan, Kevin (2017) From Presumption to Prudence in Just-War Rationality (Routledge) $107.20

Cohen, Eliot A. (2017) The Big Stick: The Limits of Soft Power and the Necessity of Military Force (Basic Books) $17.99

Cole, Darrell (2018) Just War and the Ethics of Espionage (Routledge) $49.95

Dubik, James M. (2016) Just War Reconsidered: Strategy, Ethics and Theory (University Press of Kentucky) $23.31

Fazal, Tanisha M. (2018) Wars of Law: Unintended Consequences in the Regulation of Armed Conflict (Cornell UP) $39.95 

Finlay, Christopher J. (2017) Terrorism and the Right to Resist: A Theory of Just Revolutionary War (Cambridge UP) $33.12

Finlay, Christopher (2018) Is Just War Possible? (Polity Press) $12.95

Freedman, Lawrence (2017) The Future of War: A History (PublicAffairs Press) $20.40

Gaddis, John Lewis (2018) On Grand Strategy (Penguin) $17.71 

Gross, Michael L. and Tamar Meisels (eds) (2017) Soft War: The Ethics of Unarmed Conflict (Cambridge UP) $69.01

Jensen, Wollom A. and James M. Childs, Jr. (2016) Moral Warriors, Moral Wounds: The Ministry of the Christian Ethic (Wipf & Stock) $35.70

Kingsbury, Johnathan (2018) History’s Bloodiest Revolutions (Rodger & Laz Publishing) $13.99 

Klose, Fabian (2018) The Emergence of Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas and Practice from the Nineteenth Century to the Present (Cambridge UP) $31.99

Lazar, Seth (2016) Sparing Civilians (Oxford UP) $44.95

Lucas, George (2016) Military Ethics: What Everyone Needs to Know (Oxford UP) $15.21

May, Larry (2018) Contingent Pacifism: Revisiting Just War Theory (Cambridge UP) $29.99

Meisels, Tamar (2017) Contemporary Just War: Theory and Practice (Routledge) $42.99 

Menon, Rajan (2018) The Conceit of Humanitarian Intervention (Oxford UP) $19.95

Newman, Tom (2017) Just War: A Soldier’s Revelation (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform) $9.99 

Reiner, J. Toby (2018) New Directions in Just War Theory (CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform) $12.95 

Roberts, Anthea (2017) Is International Law International? (Oxford UP) $39.95

Schadlow, Nadia (2017) War and the Art of Governance: Consolidating Combat Success into Political Victory (Georgetown UP) $32.95

Schulzke, Marcus (2017) Just War Theory and Civilian Casualties: Protecting the Victims of War (Cambridge UP) $99.99 

Tesón, Fernando R. and Bas van der Vossen (2017) Debating Humanitarian Intervention: Should We Try to Save Strangers? (Oxford UP) $24.95 

 
Journal Special Issues 

A special issue of the Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law is dedicated to “The Law of Armed Conflict” (Vol. 51, No. 3, May 2018). An introductory article by Ben Wahlhaus and Hannah Lidicker precedes essays by Sharon Afek, Eran Shamir-Borer, Knut Dormann, Michael Wood, plus a keynote address given by Yoram Dinstein.   

A recent issue of the Journal of Peace Research is dedicated to “New Findings from the Conflict Archives” (Vol. 55, Issue 2, March 2018). Guest Edited by Laia Balcells and Christopher M. Sullivan, the issue includes articles on policing institutions, accountability in the wake of violence, resistance, civil war, ideology and re-settlement during and after war.

 
4. CALLS FOR PAPERS

Ethical Theory and Moral Practice welcomes submissions of essays of various lengths, review articles, and proposals for special issues. Papers should not exceed 8000w including bibliography and footnotes, and should be accompanied by a 250w abstract. Extended papers, with a maximum word count of 15000w, will be considered in exceptional cases. Comments (i.e., responses to papers previously published in ETMP), should be less than 2500w including bibliography and footnotes. Review essays on a particular topic should be under 3000w. Reviews of current books within the scope of Ethical Theory and Moral Practice should include a brief description and critical assessment of the book’s argument and should be between 800 and 1100w. Scholars interested in writing book reviews should contact the review editors (Alexa Zellentin (alexa.zellentin@ucd.ie) and Ezio Di Nucci (ezio@sund.ku.dk). All submissions (except book reviews) should be submitted via the journal’s website: https://www.springer.com/10677 Special Issues are collections of 6-9 original papers, accompanied by an introduction by one or more Guest Editors. Proposals for special issues should be under 2000w and should include detailed information about the editors, the topic and its rationale, anticipated authors, short abstracts of planned contributions, and an explanation of the importance of the topic and authors. The ETMP editorial team will evaluate and select proposals twice each year on October 1 and April 1. Send special issue proposals to Editors-in-Chief Marcus Düwell (m.duwell@uu.nl) and Thomas Schramme (t.schramme@liverpool.ac.uk).

An upcoming issue of the Journal of Applied Philosophy will be a special issue dedicated to “Collective Agents and Global Structural Injustice”. The Guest Editors will be Christina Friedlaender and Leonie Smith, and the deadline for submissions is December 1st 2018. Essays that focus on the production of structural injustice in the absence of clear individual causal or moral responsibility are especially welcome, as are essays that consider the following questions: What is the role of collective agents in producing and rectifying specific cases of global structural injustice? Is collective responsibility backward looking, forward looking, or both? What is the relationship between global structural injustice and collective agency? Articles should be under 8000w and should be prepared in accordance with the JAP formatting guidelines, which are posted here: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/page/journal/14685930/homepage/forauthors.html Other inquiries or questions should be sent to the Editors, Christina Friedlaender (cwarne@memphis.edu) and Leonie Smith (l.smith@manchester.ac.uk.edu).

An upcoming Special Issue of the journal Humanities is dedicated to: “War and Literature: Commiserating with the Enemy”. The Guest Editor will be Rachel McCoppin, and the issue will specifically consider literary texts dealing with the topic of commiseration with “enemies” in the broader area of war literature. Essays on commiseration, moral responsibility, and propaganda in war literature are welcome, and should be submitted before January 11th 2019. The Call for Papers and other details can be found on the following website:  https://www.mdpi.com/journal/humanities/special_issues/war_literature#info

 
5. ACADEMIC PROGRAMS AND PROJECTS  

Global Justice: Theory Practice Rhetoric, a peer-reviewed, open-access e-journal for original research in international political theory, is seeking reviews. Themes of past and upcoming issues include humanitarian intervention, migration, historical injustice, development, gender, and climate change. Scholars interested in reviewing a recently published book on global justice should email the Editors at the following email address: bbuckinx@princeton.edu, including a brief bio and the title of the proposed book. Completed reviews will normally be under 2000w including title, section titles, and footnotes, and are generally due 3 months after receipt of the book under review. Proposals for Review Essays of greater length on 3-4 books are also invited. Information about the journal can be found here: https://www.theglobaljusticenetwork.org/global/index.php/gjn/pages/view/about-the-journal

 
6. INTERNET RESOURCES

https://globalethicsday.org/
October 17th is Global Ethics Day. Inspired by Earth Day, and founded by Carnegie Council in 2014, Global Ethics Day is an opportunity for organizations around the world to host activities of various kinds to celebrate and raise awareness about international ethics. The website above provides ideas for activities as well as posters for downloading. 

This lecture by Paul Scharre on ethical implications of autonomous weapons is posted on-line by the Carnegie Council. Entitled “Army of None: Autonomous Weapons and the Future of War”, the lecture is accompanied by a contextual introduction by Joanne Myers and a transcript of the proceedings.

 
Announcements

To subscribe, or to use this newsletter to announce your  new publication, research project, call for papers, conference, workshop, or other event related to the just war doctrine, simply forward the details to the following email address: msk3@queensu.ca