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Introduction |
Allan Eickelmann, Tom Lansford, and Eric Nelson |
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The justice of violence |
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Just war: an ethic of restraint or the defense of order? |
Valerie O.F. Morkevicius |
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Moralizing the violence or a just response? The dimensions and limitations of the Bush doctrine |
Chris Dolan |
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The President and the Congress in concert: declaring and making war in the United States |
Susan Weldon Scott |
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A political calculus of apology: Japan and its neighbors |
Girma Negash |
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Violence as injustice |
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Power to destroy, power to heal: violence, state power and paradigm shifts for peace |
Carol Hunter |
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The ethics of living American primacy, or, towards a global Jim Crow, and its discontents |
Will Watson |
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The fist of pacifism |
Angela Gordon & Tobias Gibson |
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Violence and non-violence as constitutional argument: an analysis of the 1963 Civil Rights demonstrations in Birmingham, Alabama |
Neal Allen |
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Fred Smith, in 'Jack Rocks, earrings and the occupation of Moss #3: emblems of the struggle for decency in the Appalachian coal fields |
Fred Smith |
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Beyond justice and injustice |
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A case of communist indoctrination and American enticement during the Korean War |
Bryan D. McKnight |
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From rollback to preemption: a comparison of the Reagan and Bush doctrines |
Robert Pauly Jr. |
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The 2003 U.S. invasion of Iraq: militarism in the service of geopolitics |
Edmund Byrne |
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Beyond politics |
Helena Cristini |
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Conclusion: no clash, but dialogue among religions and nations: towards a new paradigm of international relations |
Hans Küng |
|
Introduction |
Allan Eickelmann, Tom Lansford, and Eric Nelson |
|
The justice of violence |
|
|
Just war: an ethic of restraint or the defense of order? |
Valerie O.F. Morkevicius |