Fighting Hurt
Rule and Exception in Torture and War
Henry Shue
Table of Contents
Introduction
I. Making Exceptions?
Torture
1. Torture (1978)
2. Response to 'The Debate on Torture'
3. Torture in Dreamland: Disposing of the Ticking Bomb
4. Target-selection Norms, Torture Norms, and Growing U.S. Permissiveness
5. Mental Torture: A Critique of Erasures in U.S. Law, Henry Shue and David Luban
6. Torture (2015)
Intervention
7. 'Let Whatever Is Smouldering Erupt'? Conditional Sovereignty, Reviewable Intervention, and Rwanda 1994
8. Limiting Sovereignty
Preemption
9. Preemption, Prevention, and Predation: Why the Bush Strategy is Dangerous
10. What Would a Justified Preventive Military Attack Look Like?
11. Preemptive War
'Supreme Emergency'
Supreme Moral Emergency: Shrinking the Walzerian Exception [23 pp.] [Original Title: Liberalism: The Impossibility of Justifying Weapons of Mass Destruction]
II. Making the Rules
Bombing, Discrimination, and Proportionality
13. Bombing to Rescue? NATO's 1999 Bombing of Serbia
14. Limiting Attacks on Dual-Use Facilities Performing Indispensable Civilian Functions, Henry Shue and David Wippman
15. Proportionality in War
16. Force Protection, Military Advantage, and 'Constant Care' for Civilians: The 1991 Bombing of Iraq
Guiding Principles
17. War
18. Last Resort and Proportionality
Law and Morality of War
19. Do We Need a 'Morality of War'?
20. Laws of War
21. Limiting Killing in War, Henry Shue and Janina Dill
22. Laws of War, Morality, and International Politics: Compliance, Stringency, and Limits