Ethics and Intervention: The U.S. in Grenada, 1983 (Case Study #2)
(1990)
Terry Nardin, Kathleen D. Pritchard
| Ethics and Intervention: The U.S. in Grenada, 1983 |
The conclusion reached is that strong arguments against foreign intervention can be derived from the traditional principle of non-intervention, which international lawyers and many others regard as a pillar of international order. Such arguments are reinforced by doubts about the effectiveness and legitimacy of armed force as a remedy for international disputes. At the same time, however, the development of common standards of human rights and democratic values provides a normative basis for intervention that is not always consistent with arguments generated by the logic of the international system.
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Read More: Intervention, Armed Conflict, Just War Tradition, United States, Granada



