Introduction and Background The principle that non-combatants are not liable targets for attack, sometimes called the principle of non-combatant immunity, is sanctified in international law (Article 48, first additional protocol to the Geneva Conventions) and has gone largely unchallenged as a mainstay of just war theory until recently. It was most notably formalised in modern analytic just war theory
A normative approach to why it is never…
Introduction and Background The principle that non-combatants are not liable targets for attack, sometimes called the principle of non-combatant immunity, is sanctified in international law (Article 48, first additional protocol to the Geneva Conventions) and has gone largely unchallenged as a mainstay of just war theory until recently. It was most notably formalised in modern analytic just war theory