Our Podcasts
Listen to the latest insights from Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs. Tune in to hear from leading experts and thinkers, identifying and addressing the most critical ethical issues of today and tomorrow.
DEC 14, 2016 • Journal
Trials as Messages of Justice: What Should Be Expected of International Criminal Courts?
After more than a decade of work, the accomplishments of the International Criminal Court are highly contested. In this article, the authors ask, what can ...
DEC 14, 2016 • Journal
Introduction
The last few decades have seen a lively philosophical debate surrounding human rights. Allen Buchanan’s book The Heart of Human Rights constitutes an important ...
DEC 14, 2016 • Journal
Human Rights and Status Egalitarianism
In this essay, Miller throws doubt on Allen Buchanan's claim that to understand the system of international legal human rights, we must acknowledge not only ...
DEC 14, 2016 • Journal
Justifying International Legal Human Rights
In this essay, Tomalty argues that Buchanan's alternative account of the justification of ILHRs is problematic. Rejecting the "Mirroring View" does not entail the irrelevance ...
DEC 14, 2016 • Journal
Human Rights: A Plea for Taking the Law and Institutions Seriously
Buchanan responds to some of the points made by each of the contributors to the symposium, making his case for taking international laws and institutions ...
DEC 14, 2016 • Journal
On Constitutional Democracy and Robust International Law
This essay focuses on the tension between robust international law (RIL) and democratic constitutions. The author argues that Buchanan is broadly correct about the nature ...
DEC 14, 2016 • Journal
Are Moral Rights Necessary for the Justification of International Legal Human Rights?
Andrea Sangiovanni argues that the existence of an underlying moral right is a necessary part of any successful justification of an International Legal Human Right (...
DEC 14, 2016 • Journal
The Fragility of International Human Rights Law
In this essay, Zucca argues that some philosophers’ optimism about international human rights legal practice is misguided. He argues that human rights law is not ...
DEC 14, 2016 • Journal
The Lessons of Effective Altruism
In this essay, Rubenstein examines two recent books by Peter Singer and William MacAskill on the philosophy and philanthropic movement known as Effective Altruism (EA). ...
DEC 14, 2016 • Journal
On War and Democracy by Christopher Kutz
There is a fundamental ethical dilemma confronting all democratic states: if they intervene in violence-ridden contexts, then they are readily accused of double standards. On ...