TY - JOUR
T1 - Complicity, collectives, and killing in war
AU - Lazar, Seth
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2016.
PY - 2016/8/1
Y1 - 2016/8/1
N2 - Recent work on the ethics of war has struggled to simultaneously justify two central tenets of international law: the Permission to kill enemy combatants, and the Prohibition on targeting enemy noncombatants. Recently, just war theorists have turned to collectivist considerations as a way out of this problem. In this paper, I reject the argument that all and only unjust combatants are liable to be killed in virtue of their complicity in the wrongful war fought by their side, and that noncombatants are not permissible targets because they are not complicit. I then argue that just combatants have some reason to direct force against unjust combatants rather than unjust noncombatants, because they should respect the reasonable self-determining decisions of other political communities, when those communities settle on the distribution of a negative surplus of cost for which they are collectively but not individually responsible. These collectivist reasons will not fully justify the Permission and the Prohibition, but they can contribute to that justification.
AB - Recent work on the ethics of war has struggled to simultaneously justify two central tenets of international law: the Permission to kill enemy combatants, and the Prohibition on targeting enemy noncombatants. Recently, just war theorists have turned to collectivist considerations as a way out of this problem. In this paper, I reject the argument that all and only unjust combatants are liable to be killed in virtue of their complicity in the wrongful war fought by their side, and that noncombatants are not permissible targets because they are not complicit. I then argue that just combatants have some reason to direct force against unjust combatants rather than unjust noncombatants, because they should respect the reasonable self-determining decisions of other political communities, when those communities settle on the distribution of a negative surplus of cost for which they are collectively but not individually responsible. These collectivist reasons will not fully justify the Permission and the Prohibition, but they can contribute to that justification.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84961626163&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s10982-016-9257-1
DO - 10.1007/s10982-016-9257-1
M3 - Article
SN - 0167-5249
VL - 35
SP - 365
EP - 389
JO - Law and Philosophy
JF - Law and Philosophy
IS - 4
ER -