Archive for the ‘War’ Category

War, Journalism and Professional Ethics

BY HUGH GUSTERSON In the fall of 2007, I received an interview request from the New York Times journalist David Rohde, who was writing an article about the U.S. Army’s newly announced Human Terrain project – a program to embed anthropologists in military teams in Iraq and Afghanistan and send them out to “map the [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

Posted by admin on March 12th, 2010 No Comments

Preventing the New American “Professionalism”: Accountability for Lawyers and Health Care Professionals Shaping Torture

BY GITANJALI GUTIERREZ In the wake of September 11, 2001, the United States parted from its traditional adherence to fundamental legal principles, including domestic and international prohibitions against torture, kidnapping, disappearances, and arbitrary detention without trial.  Legal memorandum from the White House’s Office of Legal Counsel (OLC) and other government documents disclosed through the Freedom [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

Posted by admin on December 15th, 2009 No Comments

Oil and National Security

BY PHILIP AUERSWALD In the past century of dramatic political and technological change, the centrality of oil in foreign policy has been a constant. Political leaders and governments of all types have been compelled to ensure the reliability of oil supplies for military use, to reduce the potential vulnerability of their economies to fluctuations in [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

Posted by admin on March 1st, 2009 No Comments

Just War Theory and Global Gender Justice

BY DEBRA BERGOFFEN Just war theory, developed to deal with anarchy, insists that the breakdown of international order be addressed by appealing to the principles of justice rather than those of tyranny. However, the theory questions the relationship between peace and justice, and invites discussions of the ways in which injustice threatens the possibilities of [...]

  • Share/Bookmark

Posted by admin on March 3rd, 2006 No Comments