----- 定点清除:不对称的世界的法律与道德
PREFACE Introduction PART I: THE CHANGING FACE OF WAR: TARGETING NON-COMBATANTS 1. Allowing the State to Rebut the Civilian Presumption: Playing Whack-A-Mole Without a Mallet? 2. Targeting Co-belligerents 3. Can Just War Theory Justify Targeted Killing? Three Possible Models 4. Justifying Targeted Killing With a Neutral Principle? PART II: NORMATIVE FOUNDATIONS: LAW ENFORCEMENT OR WAR? 5. The Ethics of Targeted Killing on a Moral Continuum 6. Targeted Killing as Preemptive Action 7. The Privilege of Belligerency and Formal Declarations of War PART III: TARGETED KILLING AND SELF-DEFENSE 8. Going Medieval: Targeted Killing, Self-Defense, and the Jus ad Bellum Regime 9. Imminence in Justified Targeted Killing 10. Defending Defensive Targeted Killings PART IV: EXERCISING JUDGMENT IN TARGETED KILLING DECISIONS 11. The Importance of Criteria-Based Reasoning in Targeted Killing Decisions 12. Are Targeted Killings Unlawful? A Case Study in Empirical Claims without Empirical Evidence 13. Operation Neptune Spear: Was Killing Bin Laden a Legitimate Military Objective? 14. Efficiency in Bello and ad Bellum: Making the Use of Force Too Easy? PART V: UTILITARIAN TRADE-OFFS AND DEONTOLOGICAL CONSTRAINTS 15. Targeted Killing and the Logic of Double Effect 16. Targeted Killings and the Morality of Hard Choices 17. Targeted Killing and the Strategic use of Self-Defense INDEX
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