The Legitimate Use of Military Force: The Just War
Tradition and the Customary Law of Armed Conflict
edited by Howard M.
Hensel
Throughout human history,
scholars, statesmen and military leaders have attempted to define what
constitutes the legitimate use of armed force by one community against another.
Moreover, if force is to be used, what normative guidelines should govern the
conduct of warfare? Based upon the assumption that armed conflict is a human
enterprise and therefore subject to human limitations, the Western 'just war
tradition' represents an attempt to provide these guidelines. Following on from
the success of Hensel's earlier publication, The Law of Armed Conflict, this
volume brings together an internationally recognized team of scholars to
explore the philosophical and societal foundations of just war tradition. It
relates the principles of jus ad bellum to contemporary issues confronting the
global community and explores the relationship between the principles of jus in
bello and the various principles embodied in the customary law of armed
conflict. Applying an interdisciplinary approach to analyzing and assessing the
links between just war and the norms of behaviour, the book provides a valuable
contribution to international law, international relations and national
security studies.