Bookshock Ask Tez ✨
Massacres and Morality Mass Atrocities in an Age of Civilian Immunity cover

Massacres and Morality Mass Atrocities in an Age of Civilian Immunity

by Alex J. Bellamy

Lowest price on Bookshock
$60.88
1 offer
In stock

Ask Tez about this book →

This title is temporarily out of stock. Email support@bookshock.ai or call (972) 638-0790 and we'll let you know when it's back.
Free US shipping
30-day free returns
Stripe-secured checkout

All offers (1)

PriceConditionSeller
$60.88Best price New Basi6 International LLC

Stock and pricing refresh on page load. Tez can also compare prices on Amazon, AbeBooks, and ThriftBooks if you ask.

About this book

Most cultural and legal codes agree that the intentional killing of civilians, whether in peacetime or war, is prohibited. This is the norm of civilian immunity, widely considered to be a fundamental moral and legal principle. Yet despite this fact, the deliberate killing of large numbers of civilians remains a persistent feature of global political life. What is more, the perpetrators have often avoided criticism and punishment. Examining dozens of episodes of mass killing perpetrated by states since the French Revolution late eighteenth century, this book attempts to explain this paradox. It studies the role that civilian immunity has played in shaping the behaviour of perpetrators and how international society has responded to mass killing. The book argues that although the world has made impressive progress in legislating against the intentional killing of civilians and in constructing institutions to give meaning to that prohibition, the norm's history in practice suggests that the ascendancy of civilian immunity is both more recent and more fragile than might otherwise be thought. In practice, decisions to violate a norm are shaped by factors relating to the norm and the situation at hand, so too is the manner in which international society and individual states respond to norm violations. Responses to norm violations are not simply matters of normative obligation or calculations of self-interest but are instead guided by a combination of these logics as well as perceptions about the situation at hand, existing relations with the actors involved, and power relations between actors holding different accounts of the situation. Thus, whilst civilian immunity has for the time being prevailed over "anti-civilian ideologies" which seek to justify mass killing, it remains challenged by these ideologies and its implementation shaped by individual circumstances. As a result, whilst it has become much more difficult for states to get away with mass murder, it is still not entirely impossible for them to do so.

Details

Format
Paperback
Pages
450
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Language
EN
Edition
Reprint
ISBN-13
9780198714767
ISBN-10
0198714769

Categories

History, Law, International, Philosophy