Legitimate Authority and Just War

Josh Craddock, “Legitimate Authority and Just War,” Providence: A Journal of Christianity & American Foreign Policy, No. 11, pp. 60-66 (Spring-Summer 2018).

Abstract

Recent just war theory discussions have emphasized the just cause and right intention prongs of jus ad bellum, but have offered only cursory analysis of the legitimate authority prong in the American context. This article argues that legitimate authority depends in part on domestic law and that the sovereign's war powers must be exercised in accordance with the rule of law. In the American context, where sovereignty is divided, the Constitution's allocation of war powers should guide analysis. The article provides a survey of executive and congressional powers over war and hostilities, and then applies those legal rules to conflicts in Libya, Syria, and North Korea.

Previous
Previous

A Workable Substantive Due Process

Next
Next

The Case for Complicity-Based Religious Accommodations