1st Edition

Terrorism and Collective Responsibility

By Burleigh Taylor Wilkins Copyright 1992
    172 Pages
    by Routledge

    170 Pages
    by Routledge

    The terrorist threat remains a disturbing issue for the early 1990s. This book explores whether terrorism can ever be morally justifiable and if so under what circumstances.
    Professor Burleigh Taylor Wilkins suggests that the popular characterisation of terrorists as criminals fails to acknowledge the reasons why terrorists resort to violence. It is argued that terrorism cannot be adequately understood unless the collective responsibility of organised groups, such as political states, for wrongs allegedly done against the groups which the terrorists represent is taken into account. Terrorism and Collective Responsibility provides an analysis of various models of collective responsibility, and it takes into account recent discussions of military responsibility and business ethics. The book also explores the problems that terrorism poses for the just war tradition.
    The arguments of prominent philosophers against terrorism are critically examined and the claim that terrorism necessarily violates the rights of innocent persons is considered. Wilkins sets forth an original definition of terrorism that is sure to provoke controversy.

    INTRODUCTION PART 1 TERRORISM 1 Can terrorism be justified? 2 Terrorism and consequentialism 3 Violence and force 4 Innocence, just wars, and terrorism PART 2 COLLECTIVE RESPONSIBILITY 5 Responsibility for the My Lai Massacre 6 The responsibility of corporations 7 The distribution of liability

    Biography

    Burleigh Taylor Wilkins is Professor of Philosophy at the University of California at Santa Barbara. He is the author of The Problem of Burke’s Political Philosophy and Has History Any Meaning?