Legitimate Targets?: Social Construction, International Law and US Bombing (Cambridge Studies in International Relations)
Book Details
Author(s)Janina Dill
PublisherCambridge University Press
ISBN / ASIN1107694868
ISBN-139781107694866
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank913,752
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description
Based on an innovative theory of international law, Janina Dill's book investigates the effectiveness of international humanitarian law (IHL) in regulating the conduct of warfare. Through a comprehensive examination of the IHL defining a legitimate target of attack, Dill reveals a controversy among legal and military professionals about the 'logic' according to which belligerents ought to balance humanitarian and military imperatives: the logics of sufficiency or efficiency. Law prescribes the former, but increased recourse to international law in US air warfare has led to targeting in accordance with the logic of efficiency. The logic of sufficiency is morally less problematic, yet neither logic satisfies contemporary expectations of effective IHL or legitimate warfare. Those expectations demand that hostilities follow a logic of liability, which proves impracticable. This book proposes changes to international law, but concludes that according to widely shared normative beliefs, on the twenty-first-century battlefield there are no truly legitimate targets.
