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CRANFIELD UNIVERSITY DAREN BOWYER JUST WAR DOCTRINE

CRANFIELD UNIVERSITY DAREN BOWYER JUST WAR DOCTRINE

CRANFIELD UNIVERSITY DAREN BOWYER JUST WAR DOCTRINE

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ABSTRACT<br />

For nearly two millennia just war doctrine has been central to Western understanding of<br />

justified resort to armed force, and on in conduct of war. As the international system<br />

developed so the theory was first secularised and then all but rendered obsolete by a<br />

legal paradigm that sought first to establish states’ rights and, later, to eliminate armed<br />

force as an instrument of international policy all together.<br />

In the world order that has emerged after the Cold War, the legal paradigm has been<br />

found wanting yet there remains a requirement for resort to force to be justified. Such<br />

justification is required at the international level – in order for a state to retain moral<br />

standing and be able to exercise ‘soft power’ – at the national level – for the government<br />

to retain its legitimacy – and at the individual level – for the moral well-being of those<br />

who must fight.<br />

Whilst the nature of warfare remains constant – it is about using violence to impose one<br />

state’s will upon another, but is an essentially human activity – its chacarter evolves to<br />

reflect the age. Contemporary security threats and a changed value-set have made<br />

Western governments more interventionist and concern over non-state actors, mass-<br />

destructive weaponry and the threats emerging from state failure have prompted some to<br />

argue a case for preventive war.<br />

Western technological dominance and the preference for a different form of asymmetry<br />

on the part of the West’s opponents challenge traditional concepts of jus in bello. This<br />

is exacerbated by the appearance on the battlefield of a range of new actors and by a<br />

tendency – on the part of the West – to attempt to distance soldiers – the ultimate moral<br />

agents in conflict – from the battlefield, creating ‘moral distance’ that may undermine<br />

our ability to apply proportionality and discrimination.<br />

i

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