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Document Details :

Title: The Burden of Autonomy
Subtitle: Non-combatant Immunity and Humanitarian Intervention
Author(s): CORNWELL, William
Journal: Ethical Perspectives
Volume: 12    Issue: 3   Date: September 2005   
Pages: 341-355
DOI: 10.2143/EP.12.3.2004486

Abstract :
Michael Walzer argues that except in cases involving genocide or mass slaughter, humanitarian intervention is unjustifiable because “citizens get the government they deserve, or, at least, the government for which they are ‘fit.’” Yet, if people are autonomous and deserve the government that rules over them, then it would seem that they are responsible for the government’s actions, including their nation’s wars of aggression. That line of thought undermines the doctrine of noncombatant immunity, which is perhaps the most important of Walzer’s jus in bello principles. In this way, the concept of self-determination frustrates Walzer’s attempts to keep jus ad bellum and jus in bello considerations separate.

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