In 2005, US Marines killed 24 unarmed Iraqi civilians in the town of Haditha, including several children. How should we assess the perpetrators of this and other war crimes? Is it unfair to blame the Marines because they were subject to situational pressures such as combat stress (and had lost one of their own in combat)? Or should they be held responsible for their actions, since they intentionally chose to kill civilians? In this book, Matthew Talbert and Jessica Wolfendale take up these moral questions and propose an original theory of the causes of war crimes and the responsibility of war crimes perpetrators. In the first half of the book, they challenge accounts that explain war crimes by reference to the situational pressures endured by military personnel, including peer pressure, combat stress, and propaganda. The authors propose an alternative theory that explains how military personnel make sense of their participation in war crimes through their self-conceptions, goals, and values. In the second half of the book, the authors consider and reject theories of responsibility that excuse perpetrators on the grounds that situational pressures often encourage them to believe that their behavior is permissible. Such theories of responsibility are unacceptably exculpatory, implying it is unreasonable for victims of war crimes to blame their attackers. By contrast, Talbert and Wolfendale argue that perpetrators of war crimes may be blameworthy if their actions express objectionable attitudes towards their victims, even if they sincerely believe that what they are doing is right.
Schacht, Hjalmar Horace Greeley (1877–1970) German banker Hjalmar Schacht was a leading German financier who served as minister of economics under Adolf HITLER before falling out of favor with the führer. He was exonerated on war crime ...
Tribunal for Former Yugoslavia
Of the ICTY.
In the five decades after the Nuremberg trials, not one single international trial for war criminals took place until 1993. In that year a court was finally set up --...
Allison Brown. New York: Columbia University Press, 2006. Fritz, Stephen G. Endkampf: Soldiers, Civilians and the Death of the Third Reich. Lexington: University of Kentucky Press, 2004. Fussell, Paul. Doing Battle: The Making of a ...
Documenting the long historical arc traced by human efforts to limit warfare, from codes of war in antiquity designed to maintain a religiously conceived cosmic order to the gradual use in the modern age of the criminal trial as a means of ...
In this sweeping, definitive work, historian David Crowe offers an unflinching account of the long and troubled history of genocide and war crimes.
As Arieh Kochavi demonstrates, the policies finally adopted, including the institution of the Nuremberg trials, represented the culmination of a complicated process rooted in the domestic and international politics of the war years.
Ending War Crimes, Chasing the War Criminals -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Outline -- Preface -- 1 Adolf Eichmann, the Concentration Camp Boss-His Escape, Arrest and Hanging -- 2 Heinrich Himmler, Hitler's Deputy - From ...
These will not only be necessary for the future work of the ICC in interpreting the crimes provisions, but also for national courts, which have primary responsibility in the prosecution of international crimes under the Rome Statute.