Search Results For:
Topic "postwar iraq"
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Andrew Arato |
Andrew Arato is Dorothy Hirshon Professor in Political and Social Theory at the Graduate Faculty, New School University.
Hilary Charlesworth |
Hilary Charlesworth is professor and director of the Centre for International Governance and Justice in the Regulatory Institutions Network at the Australian National University.
Exit the Colonel: The Hidden History of the Libyan Revolution | 10/27/12
Ethan Chorin,
Joanne J. Myers
The real story of the Libyan Revolution began not with the Arab Spring, but in 2003, when anti-Qaddafi sanctions were lifted. Former U.S. diplomat Ethan Chorin was posted to Libya in 2004 and was in Benghazi when Ambassador Stevens was killed. He gives an insider's perspective on this complex tale.
United Nations Justice: Legal and Judicial Reform in Governance Operations | 09/28/10
Calin Trenkov-Wermuth's "United Nations Justice" provides a thoughtful and useful contribution to the understanding of how UN governance operations have evolved.
"The Gender of Reparations: Unsettling Sexual Hierarchies While Redressing Human Rights Violations" Edited by Ruth Rubio-Marin [Full Text] | 06/14/10
This edited collection provides a gender-sensitive analysis of reparations programs in transitional and postconflict societies, examining the gendered nature of violence during armed conflict and political repression, and reparations as an approach to promoting postconflict justice.
Eclipse of the Sunnis: Power, Exile, and Upheaval in the Middle East | 05/19/10
Deborah Amos
1.9 million Sunni Muslims have been forced into exile following the Iraq War, says Deborah Amos. What impact is this having on these people's lives, on Iraq, and on the region's delicate balance of power?
Eclipse of the Sunnis: Power, Exile, and Upheaval in the Middle East | 03/26/10
Deborah Amos,
Joanne J. Myers
1.9 million Sunni Muslims have been forced into exile following the Iraq War, says Deborah Amos. What impact is this having on these people's lives, on Iraq, and on the region's delicate balance of power?
Eclipse of the Sunnis: Power, Exile, and Upheaval in the Middle East | 03/23/10
Deborah Amos,
Joanne J. Myers
1.9 million Sunni Muslims have been forced into exile following the Iraq War, says Deborah Amos. What impact is this having on these people's lives, on Iraq, and on the region's delicate balance of power?
A Humanitarian Assessment of the War in Iraq | 07/07/09
Ali Wyne
The debates about withdrawing from Iraq have excluded what would seem to be a self-evident point of contention: how best to repair the damage that Iraqis have suffered as a result of the war.
Perspectives on National Reconciliation in Iraq | 02/11/08
Mokhtar Lamani,
Joanne J. Myers
Appointed by the Arab League as Special Envoy to Iraq, Mohktar Lamani spent a
year in Baghdad's dangerous Red Zone trying to bring about peace between
Shiites, Sunnis, Kurds, and Christians. But his efforts were crippled by
sectarian conflict and he resigned in February 2007.
Perspectives on National Reconciliation in Iraq | 02/04/08
Mokhtar Lamani,
Joanne J. Myers
Appointed by the Arab League as Special Envoy to Iraq, Mohktar Lamani spent a year in Baghdad's dangerous Red Zone trying to bring about peace between Shiites, Sunnis, Kurds, and Christians.
Perspectives on National Reconciliation in Iraq | 01/31/08
Mokhtar Lamani
Appointed by the Arab League as Special Envoy to Iraq, Mohktar Lamani spent a year in Baghdad's dangerous Red Zone trying to bring about peace between Shiites, Sunnis, Kurds, and Christians. But his efforts were crippled by sectarian conflict and he resigned in February 2007.
Iraq After the "Surge" | 11/11/07
Jeffrey D. McCausland
Is the "surge" working? McCausland analyzes its results in four different areas of Iraqi life: political, military, diplomatic, and economic. He goes on to discuss the way forward, which seems to be a choice between several bad alternatives.
What We Owe Iraq: War and the Ethics of Nation Building | 09/13/07
Noah Feldman,
Joanne J. Myers
Feldman, a constitutional expert and Arabic-speaker sent to Iraq by the Bush administration, argues that U.S. intervention in Iraq amounts to a moral promise, and unless asked to leave, we are morally bound to stay until a legitimately elected government can govern effectively.
And Now from the Green Zone . . . Reflections on the Iraq Tribunal's Dujail Trial [Full Text] | 09/07/06
Miranda Sissons
The Iraq tribunal is an odd creature. It is an Iraqi-led mechanism designed and supported by foreigners. It is based on international law but relies heavily on Iraqi legal tradition and procedures. And it is a postconflict initiative in the midst of escalating war.
Saddam Hussein's Trial Meets the "Fairness" Test [Full Text] | 09/07/06
Kingsley Chiedu Moghalu
Despite legitimate concerns, Saddam Hussein has received an appropriate and fair trial, both in light of the specific details of the judicial proceedings and in light of the political nature of war crimes justice in an anarchic system of states.
The Ethics of Lustration [Abstract] | 04/24/06
Jens Meierhenrich
One of the most important challenges for the occupation of Iraq has been making decisions about the status of people who were either responsible for or who passively benefited from the regime’s past injustices.
The Ethics of Secession and Postinvasion Iraq [Abstract] | 04/24/06
Margaret Moore
This article outlines the two central theories in the ethics of secession and examines whether or under what conditions these normative theories would be satisfied in a post-invasion Iraq.
Corporate Warriors: The Privatized Military Industry and Iraq | 12/01/05
P. W. Singer,
Joanne J. Myers
P. W. Singer examines the Pentagon's policy of contracting private security and logistics firms for tasks ranging from combat to catering in the Iraq War. What are the ethical dilemmas and conflicting incentives of outsourcing a traditional state function to essentially mercenary groups?
Corporate Warriors: The Privatized Military and Iraq | 12/01/05
P. W. Singer,
Joanne J. Myers
P. W. Singer examines the Pentagon's policy of contracting private security and logistics firms for tasks ranging from combat to catering in the Iraq War. What are the ethical dilemmas and conflicting incentives of outsourcing a traditional state function to essentially mercenary groups?
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