Ethics, Law and Armed Conflict
A podcast by Oxford University
63 Episodes
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Migration, Digital Images and the Future of Insurgency
Published: 09/08/2011 -
Morality and Law in War
Published: 13/06/2011 -
Humanitarianism and History: Rethinking the Neutrality Debate
Published: 13/06/2011 -
Intervention in Libya and Implications for European and Transatlantic Defence Cooperation
Published: 13/06/2011 -
Intervening to Protect Civilians: Debating the NATO-led mission in Libya
Published: 13/06/2011 -
Targeted Killings: A Modern Strategy of the State (partial)
Published: 13/06/2011 -
Sovereign Equality and Moral Disagreement: Premises of a Pluralist International Legal Order
Published: 18/05/2011 -
Stabilisation, Security and Capacity Building - What the Business Schools and Sociologists might tell the Military
Published: 18/05/2011 -
Killing in Humanitarian Wars
Published: 16/05/2011 -
Aiding the Peace in Southern Sudan: A Multi-donor Evaluation of Support to Conflict Prevention and Peacebuilding Activities in Southern Sudan 2005-2010
Published: 14/03/2011 -
Military Ethics as Professional Ethics: The Limits of the Philosophical Approach
Published: 08/03/2011 -
The Untold War
Published: 08/03/2011 -
The Battlefield from Afar: Independently Operating Systems and their Compatibility with the laws of Armed Conflict
Published: 21/02/2011 -
Being Humanitarian: Personal Morality and Political Project in Today's Wars
Published: 21/02/2011 -
Contemporary Security Challenges (partial)
Published: 21/02/2011 -
Special Responsibilities in World Politics
Published: 11/02/2011 -
Invisible War: The United States and The Iraq Sanctions
Published: 05/01/2011 -
An Extraordinary Humanitarian Intervention - Why We Fight Conference lecture 2
Published: 05/01/2011 -
Just Cause For War: A Contractarian Analysis - Why We Fight Conference lecture 3
Published: 05/01/2011 -
Global Injustice and Redistributive Wars - Why We Fight Conference lecture 4
Published: 05/01/2011
Podcasts of seminars and events held at the Oxford Institute for Ethics, Law and Armed Conflict, University of Oxford.