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Theories of International Ethics

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Title: Theories of International Ethics


1
Theories of International Ethics
  • How can we judge leaders actions?

2
I. Bases of ethics
  • Consequentialism Right and wrong depend on
    consequences of our actions. Examples
  • Constrained choice (practical necessity) We can
    be excused when the consequences of any other
    choice would be to prevent us from making further
    choices. (Analogy a gun to your head).
  • Utilitarianism Greatest good for the greatest
    number.
  • Deontology Certain acts are right or wrong
    regardless of consequences
  • Argument from divine revelation Certain acts
    prohibited by moral law even though no
    punishment/consequences
  • Kants Categorical Imperative Act only when you
    want your behavior to become a universal law

3
II. Goals National vs. Global Interests
  • National Interest Sometimes incoherent (Arrows
    Theorem) but probably includes physical and
    economic security
  • Implication Governments should value own
    citizens welfare above welfare of others
  • Problems
  • Identifying long-term national interest is hard
    or even impossible
  • National interests may conflict ? creates
    opposing moral duties. Implies
  • Your countrys national interest must be defended
    as a moral goal but this rules out objective
    arguments from a hypothetical original position

4
B. The global interest Everyone is equal
  • Implication Equal moral weight to every life
  • Problems
  • Requires governments to sacrifice their own
    people (and people to sacrifice themselves) for
    the good of others (self-detachment)
  • Arrows theorem undercuts the idea of the global
    interest as a set of policies. Instead, limit
    to focus of all are equal

5
III. Four Views of International Ethics
6
A. Practical Necessity
  • Felix Oppenheims Argument
  • Morality implies choice to say that a state
    should take Action A instead of Action B is to
    imply that it does indeed have a choice.
  • Practical necessity makes morality irrelevant
    Even if a state has a choice between Actions A
    and B, if it faces extinction if it pursues
    Action B, then it is practically necessary for it
    to pursue Action A
  • National interest is necessary goal States that
    fail to pursue the national interest get eaten by
    those that do ? critical step does this happen?
  • It is not rational to oppose something that is
    practically necessary, since no genuine choice
    exists.

7
2. Implications of Practical Necessity
  • Recommending national interest Redundant
  • Opposing it Irrational
  • Goals compatible with national interest
  • Only one effective means available Support
    redundant, opposition irrational.
  • Several effective means available Morality comes
    into play.
  • Some means more effective than others irrational
    to oppose the more effective means and redundant
    to oppose the less effective means. (If something
    is necessary, then it must be pursued using the
    best means at hand.)
  • Several equally effective means available Moral
    choice exists

8
3. Problems with Practical Necessity
  • If true, the theory is useless If truly
    necessary, all states will at all times follow
    national interest.
  • National Interest can be incoherent Arrows
    Theorem
  • Is risk morally equivalent to certainty? Very
    few choices involve certain death. Is every risk
    to be avoided?
  • Mixed evidence on necessity of national interest
  • Assumes existence is its own purpose Do
    societies exist to promote any particular value
    or way of life?

9
III. Four Views of International Ethics
10
B. Utilitarianism
  • Fundamental principle Greatest good for the
    greatest number. Everyones happiness counts
    equally.
  • Variant (John Rawls) Reason from a original
    position behind a veil of ignorance. Assume
    decisions must be made without knowing your own
    place in the world. Which world do you want to
    live in? Rawls Would choose world that protects
    the weak.

11
3. Problems with Utilitarianism
  • Vagueness The greatest good is even more
    problematic than national interest
  • Incorrect calculations can justify anything
    Examples economic benefits and social stability
    used to justify slavery, hegemonic stability
    theory
  • Distributive justice Utilitarianism allows us
    to treat people unfairly for the benefit of
    others (kill half and give their stuff to the
    rest, cutting pollution in the process). Rawls
    does avoid this problem
  • Denies state sovereignty States arent happy or
    unhappy, only people are so sovereignty is
    meaningless.

12
III. Four Views of International Ethics
13
C. Social Contract
  • Fundamental principle Treat people as ends and
    not merely means, regardless of consequences
    (derived from Kant)
  • Legitimacy Government power is moral if and only
    if exercised by consent of people (taken from
    Locke and Kant)
  • Theft is wrong Treats people as means to an end

14
2. Implications
  • Government must serve national interest will of
    the people determines right and wrong for their
    government
  • Defense is moral Consent can be inferred for
    the continued survival of the people
  • Reject foreign aid and charity Taxing (theft)
    some to help others is wrong. Treats people as
    means rather than ends. Remember, consequences
    irrelevant!
  • All lives are not equal under legitimate law
    each government exists to promote the welfare of
    a limited group, not everyone

15
3. Problems with the Social Contract
  • Confuses consent to government with consent to
    each government act People may agree to be bound
    by a process that sometimes harms them
  • Logically precludes all social welfare within the
    state as well as without
  • May require government to treat foreigners as
    means to the end of domestic happiness
  • Problems with national interest (disagreement)
    can create need for secrecy ? but lying to
    citizens violates Kantian principles and Lockes
    idea of legitimate consent of the people!

16
III. Four Views of International Ethics
17
D. International Moral Norms
  • Fundamental principle Categorical Imperative
    (Behave in ways that you think others should
    behave)
  • Implications. Depends on system, but if we
    assume law is necessary to live together, then
  • Negotiate international laws
  • Follow them once negotiated
  • Two wrongs dont make a right noncompliance by
    others does not end the moral force of law
  • Do the right thing even when no law exists

18
3. Problems with International Moral Norms
  • New state dilemma Why obey rules to which the
    state never consented?
  • Changing state dilemma Stronger states want to
    revoke consent to rules that protect the weak
  • Legal indeterminacy Law frequently contradicts
    itself
  • No justification for sovereignty Why not a
    single world government, if supra-national rules
    are superior?
  • Basis for law is left unresolved Consent,
    Natural Law, Philosophy, Religion?

19
IV. The Content of International Law
  • International Norms Unwritten principles that
    states usually claim to follow
  • Jus ad Bellum The law of Just War
  • Right authority War must be authorized (by a
    state?)
  • Right intention Aim of war is to re-establish
    just peace, not narrow self-interest
  • Reasonable Hope Victory possible
  • Proportionality Means must be proportional to
    both ends and provocation
  • Last Resort War is costly, so should be last
    resort

20
2. Humanitarian Intervention
  • Original scope Rescue own citizens
  • Expanded concept Rescue others from danger
  • Limits Excludes regime change or territorial
    acquisition as means. Protect using minimum
    necessary force.

21
B. From Norms to Law
  • Statutory international law Treaties
  • Customary international law
  • A certain legal practice is observed
  • It is generally regarded as binding (often
    disputed)
  • Examples Diplomatic immunity, Law of the Sea,
    Prohibitions of slavery and genocide (all
    regarded as binding prior to treaties)

22
C. The International Law of War
  • War is prohibited by Kellogg-Briand Pact

23
Kellogg-Briand Pact (1929)
  • ARTICLE I The High Contracting Parties solemly
    declare in the names of their respective peoples
    that they condemn recourse to war for the
    solution of international controversies, and
    renounce it, as an instrument of national policy
    in their relations with one another.
  • ARTICLE II The High Contracting Parties agree
    that the settlement or solution of all disputes
    or conflicts of whatever nature or of whatever
    origin they may be, which may arise among them,
    shall never be sought except by pacific means.

24
C. The International Law of War
  • War is prohibited by Kellogg-Briand Pact, UN
    Charter

25
UN Charter
  • Article II, paragraph 4 "All Members shall
    refrain in their international relations from the
    threat or use of force against the territorial
    integrity or political independence of any state,
    or in any other manner inconsistent with the
    Purposes of the United Nations."

26
C. The International Law of War
  • War is prohibited by Kellogg-Briand Pact, UN
    Charter except
  • Right of Self-Defense (Article 51 of UN Charter)

27
Article 51 Exceptions
  • Nothing in the present Charter shall impair the
    inherent right of individual or collective
    self-defence if an armed attack occurs against a
    Member of the United Nations, until the Security
    Council has taken measures necessary to maintain
    international peace and security. Measures taken
    by Members in the exercise of this right of
    self-defence shall be immediately reported to the
    Security Council and shall not in any way affect
    the authority and responsibility of the Security
    Council under the present Charter to take at any
    time such action as it deems necessary in order
    to maintain or restore international peace and
    security.

28
C. The International Law of War
  • War is prohibited by Kellogg-Briand Pact, UN
    Charter except
  • Right of Self-Defense (Article 51 of UN Charter)
    limited to response to armed aggression until
    Security Council can deal with the situation.
    Requires notification of the Security Council

29
b. Anticipatory Self-Defense The Caroline Test
(Customary)
  • During the unsuccessful rebellion of 1837 in
    Upper Canada, against British rule, the British
    seized the US ship Caroline. In an exchange of
    diplomatic notes between the governments of the
    United States and Great Britain, then U.S.
    Secretary of State Daniel Webster outlined a
    framework for self-defense which did not require
    a prior attack. Military response to a threat was
    judged permissible so long as the danger posed
    was
  • instant,
  • overwhelming,
  • leaving no choice of means and
  • no moment of deliberation.

30
c. Military enforcement of international law
  • Requires approval of UN Security Council
  • Only Security Council has authority to enforce
    its resolutions unless resolution states
    otherwise i.e. Pakistan cannot attack India
    over Kashmir, Arab states cannot invade Israel to
    enforce partition

31
The UN Charter Procedures
  • Article 41 The Security Council may decide what
    measures not involving the use of armed force are
    to be employed to give effect to its decisions,
    and it may call upon the Members of the United
    Nations to apply such measures. These may include
    complete or partial interruption of economic
    relations and of rail, sea, air, postal,
    telegraphic, radio, and other means of
    communication, and the severance of diplomatic
    relations.
  • Article 42 Should the Security Council consider
    that measures provided for in Article 41 would be
    inadequate or have proved to be inadequate, it
    may take such action by air, sea, or land forces
    as may be necessary to maintain or restore
    international peace and security. Such action may
    include demonstrations, blockade, and other
    operations by air, sea, or land forces of Members
    of the United Nations.

32
c. Military enforcement of international law
  • Requires approval of UN Security Council
  • Only Security Council has authority to enforce
    its resolutions unless resolution states
    otherwise i.e. Pakistan cannot attack India
    over Kashmir, Arab states cannot invade Israel to
    enforce partition
  • Precedent
  • UN Resolution 573 The UN Security Council
    condemned Israel on a 15-0 vote (US abstaining)
    in 1985, after Israel bombed PLO camps in Tripoli
    -- attacking a state which merely hosted
    terrorists, as opposed to actually committing
    acts of aggression itself

33
2. General principles of the Laws of War
  • Discrimination Means used must discriminate
    between combatants and non-combatants.
  • No rule of reciprocity legally, two wrongs
    dont make a right.
  • Military necessity balancing test If a weapon
    has adverse consequences (ie harms civilians
    directly or indirectly) then it should only be
    used where it will make a large difference in the
    war effort.
  • Proportionality Means used must be proportional
    to ends achieved. In general, a disproportionate
    response (i.e. full-scale invasion in response to
    a diplomatic slight) is illegal.
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