War and Law since 1945

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Product Description

Civilization has long tried to limit the violence and cruelty of war. This important new book by a leading authority on ethics and war traces the recent history of these efforts, and explores key contemporary issues in this area. Best shows how the Second World War prompted reconstruction of
international law, and charts the fortunes of its relations with war since then. He surveys the whole range of post-1945 armed conflict–high-tech international wars, wars of national liberation, revolutions, and civil wars–to offer an original and thought-provoking approach to contemporary
history, law, politics, and ethics.

Review

“A comprehensive and realistic treatise…An important contribution.”–
CHOICE

“This is an important book, which the specialists in this subject will refer to for decades to come.”–
Sunday Telegraph

“[An] ambitious, highly significant and courageous new book…Interdisciplinary in approach, it is an important text for teachers, students and the practitioners of international relations alike…Its conclusions, so relevant to the latter part of this century, must not be ignored.”–
The Irish

Times

“[A] wide-ranging treatise.”–
Times Higher Education Supplement

“An important book that should attract the attention of policy-making and activist circles in addition to the usual scholarly ones.”–
American Historical Review

“Geoffrey Best traces with impressive analysis and citiation the general development of an international law of war.”–
Law and History Review

About the Author

Geoffrey Best is at Universities of Edinburgh and Sussex.

War and Law since 1945
War and Law since 1945

5,376.00

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