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Applied Afro-Communitarian Ethics and Foreign Armed Intervention

Autor Danny Singh
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 8 ian 2025
Just war theory concerns the morality of engaging in warfare, the conduct in war and justice – including democratization and reconstruction – in the aftermath to end war. The morality of war can be measured from a variety of military and philosophical ethics that include theological, consequentialist and realist schools of thought. Various military interventions, such as Bosnia, Afghanistan and Iraq, have been analyzed and evaluated and criticized from a Western and, especially, liberal point of view. 
In this book, Danny Singh addresses foreign interventions from a different normative paradigm. Namely, he addresses the morality of foreign military interventions in light of Afro-communitarianism, a dominant philosophical approach in sub-Saharan Africa. According to Afro-communitarianism, positive communal relationships/social harmony are the greatest good that can be achieved to form friendship (which can be understood as the combination of shared identity and goodwill). Even though Afro-communitarianism prioritizes peaceful communal relations, enmity-behavior and violence are morally permissible if it either leads to a less disharmonious state of affairs or to a harmonious state of affairs or there are no friendly alternatives to achieve any of both desired outcomes but the initiator of conflict desires to promote them. Moreover, Afro-communitarianism prescribes dialogue as a guiding action to avoid military conflict. The book provides an alternative, and non-Western, approach to the morality of war and efforts to promote sustainable peace in the aftermath of conflict between warring belligerent parties.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9783031641091
ISBN-10: 3031641094
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: Approx. 255 p. 10 illus.
Dimensiuni: 148 x 210 mm
Greutate: 0.54 kg
Ediția:2024
Editura: Springer Nature Switzerland
Colecția Palgrave Macmillan
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland

Cuprins

Introduction. - Chapter I. Principles of Afro-communitarianism and permissible violence.- Chapter II. Rwanda, the United Nations and intervention.- Chapter III. The United Nations and Britain in Sierra Leone.- Chapter IV. The Afghan invasion and fight against terrorism.- Chapter V. United States and allied unilateral intervention in Iraq.- Chapter VI. African-led military interventions.- Chapter VII. Implications of non-interventions in Nigeria, the Niger Delta and Syria.- Chapter VIII. Conclusions.

Notă biografică

Danny Singh is Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations at Teesside University, UK.

Textul de pe ultima copertă

Just war theory concerns the morality of engaging in warfare, the conduct in war and justice – including democratization and reconstruction – in the aftermath to end war. The morality of war can be measured from a variety of military and philosophical ethics that include theological, consequentialist and realist schools of thought. Various military interventions, such as Bosnia, Afghanistan and Iraq, have been analyzed and evaluated and criticized from a Western and, especially, liberal point of view. 
In this book, Danny Singh addresses foreign interventions from a different normative paradigm. Namely, he addresses the morality of foreign military interventions in light of Afro-communitarianism, a dominant philosophical approach in sub-Saharan Africa. According to Afro-communitarianism, positive communal relationships/social harmony are the greatest good that can be achieved to form friendship (which can be understood as the combination of shared identity and goodwill). Even though Afro-communitarianism prioritizes peaceful communal relations, enmity-behavior and violence are morally permissible if it either leads to a less disharmonious state of affairs or to a harmonious state of affairs or there are no friendly alternatives to achieve any of both desired outcomes but the initiator of conflict desires to promote them. Moreover, Afro-communitarianism prescribes dialogue as a guiding action to avoid military conflict. The book provides an alternative, and non-Western, approach to the morality of war and efforts to promote sustainable peace in the aftermath of conflict between warring belligerent parties.
Danny Singh is Senior Lecturer in Politics and International Relations at Teesside University, UK.

Caracteristici

Addresses the morality of foreign military interventions in light of Afro-communitarianism Makes a case for the decolonization of the ethics of war Applies the ethics of Afro-communitarianism to a range of military interventions