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Public Ethics Radio: Jeff McMahan on Proportionality

Public Ethics Radio (Centre for Applied Philosophy and Public Ethics, and Carnegie Council)

Jeff McMahan, Christian Barry, Matt Peterson

January 25, 2009

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Out of some 1,300 Palestinians killed in Gaza, Israel claims that it can name more than 700 of the dead who were Hamas fighters. Claiming precise knowledge of their targets, Israeli officials insist that their attacks were judiciously planned so as to minimize harm to civilians. Despite this apparent caution, however, any assault on Israel’s enemies makes certain the deaths of innocent civilians. 

In this Public Ethics Radio broadcast, we discuss the role that civilian casualties play in assessing the justice of war.

For a war to be just, it must satisfy what is known as the proportionality principle. In a disproportionate war, the harms caused by going to war are so evil that they outweigh the benefits of an otherwise worthy goal. Considerations of proportionality are also relevant to the assessment of particular tactics undertaken in an ongoing war.
Related Resources:

Read More: Armed Conflict, EthicsJust War Tradition, , Middle East, Global, Israel, Palestine



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