Conference: Is Targeted Killing Permissible?: Philosophical, Moral, and Legal Aspects Friday, April 15th and Saturday, April 16th, 2011
The University of Pennsylvania Institute for Law & Philosophy along with the Jean Beer Blumenfeld Center for Ethics of Georgia State are sponsoring: Is Targeted Killing Permissible? Philosophical, Moral and Legal Aspects on Friday, April 15th and Saturday, April 16th, 2011. Here is the conference description:
The Obama administration has authorized the CIA to target and kill Anwar al-Aulaqi, a radical Muslim cleric believed to have ties to al-Qaeda, on the ground that he helped to orchestrate attacks against the United States. The authorization raises the interesting question of who is a legitimate target of such military actions. In particular, it is arguably difficult to think of al-Aulaqi as a belligerent against the U.S., as he is himself an American citizen. Al-Aulaqi, however, is not the only person whose identification as a legitimate target raises moral and legal complications. The U.S. and other governments have been targeting and killing many others as part of both the fight against Islamic terrorists and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the widespread use of this technique raises important questions in just war theory. Notable as well is the fact that the U.S. has been targeting suspected militants with unmanned aerial drones, sophisticated military planes controlled remotely from distant lands.
The questions the conference will explore fall into four rough categories. First is a series of basic questions identifying the activity and its parameters: What is targeted killing in a military context and what is the theory under which such killings may be permissible? If targeted killing is ever permissible, what is the range of permissible targets? Should targets be restricted to belligerents only? Or are there individuals who, as civilians nevertheless make themselves into legitimate targets by threatening central interests of the United States? A second set of issues has to do with authority and responsibility: Who is permitted to carry out targeted killings? Do private contractors take on the mantle of military justification when they act on behalf of military officials? Is the justification for engaging in a targeted killing one person may have as an official defender of the country transferrable to a civilian assister? Most importantly, what is the responsibility of actors who carry out targeted killings that miss their mark? If moral and legal mistakes are made, do the resulting acts of assassination count as war crimes? A third set of issues has to do with the manner in which targeted killings are carried out: Is it morally relevant that remote-controlled machines are used to attack targets? If so, is preemptive killing nevertheless legitimate if performed by a droid? And if so, what is the permissible scope of preemptive killing conducted in this way? A fourth set of issues attempts to penetrate the theory of targeted killing by comparing it to other areas of the law: What is the relation between targeted killing and self-defense? Does societal self-defense follow parallel principles to personal self-defense? And finally, what is the status of targeted killing according to traditional just war theory and international law? These questions arise at the intersection of moral, political, and legal theory, just war theory, national security law, and international law, as well as criminal and constitutional law and theory.
Click “Read the full entry” below to see the participant list and suggested background reading.
Suggested Background Reading on Targeted Killing
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Confirmed Participants
Professor Lawrence Alexander Professor Andrew Altman Professor Kenneth Anderson Professor Luis Chiesa Professor Russell Christopher Ambassador Dell Dailey Major John Dehn Professor Eric Feldman Professor Claire Finkelstein Professor Jean Galbraith Professor Kevin Govern Professor Alexander Greenawalt Professor Virginia Held Professor Frances Kamm Professor Leo Katz |
Professor Matt Lister Professor Craig Martin Colonel Mark Maxwell Professor Jeff McMahan Professor Gregory S. McNeal Major Richard Meyer Professor Phillip Montague Professor Michael Moore Professor Stephen Morse Professor Jens Ohlin Professor Deborah Pearlstein Professor Stephen Perry Professor Harvey Rubin Professor Fernando Tesón Professor Peter Vallentyne |
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