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Beyond non-intervention
pp. 122-130
Abstract
In his chapter Raymond Plant, with the gentle trailing of the cloak, writes: "It seems fairly obvious that a rights-based theory would be most congenial for someone who wanted to think about intervention".2 Other chapters have invited us to think of alternative starting places for an analysis of the ethics of intervention: realism offers us interest or prudence; the morality of states offers us rights, not of individuals but of states; and the Aristotelian position offers us virtues, in particular the virtue of humanity. These are rival and perfectly legitimate starting points for a theory justifying intervention, or non-intervention. Nevertheless, as will be seen below, the rights thesis is the most challenging one and the one to which the strongest antithesis should be offered.
Publication details
Published in:
Forbes Ian, Hoffman Mark (1993) Political theory, international relations, and the ethics of intervention. Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Pages: 122-130
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-349-22913-0_10
Full citation:
Vincent R. J., Wilson Peter (1993) „Beyond non-intervention“, In: I. Forbes & M. Hoffman (eds.), Political theory, international relations, and the ethics of intervention, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 122–130.