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Can Institutions Have Responsibilities? : Collective Moral Agency and International Relations
The United Nations and the Fall of Srebrenica
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Author(s):
Anthony Lang
Publication date
(Print):
2003
Publisher:
Palgrave Macmillan UK
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Moral Responsibility and the Boundaries of Community : Power and Accountability from a Pragmatic Point of View
Marion Smiley
(1992)
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Book Chapter
Publication date (Print):
2003
Pages
: 183-203
DOI:
10.1057/9781403938466_11
SO-VID:
cf5126ec-9c75-4184-a560-c49349048b37
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Book chapters
pp. 1
Introduction: Making Sense of ‘Responsibility’ in International Relations — Key Questions and Concepts
pp. 19
Assigning Responsibilities to Institutional Moral Agents: The Case of States and ‘Quasi-States’
pp. 41
Moral Responsibility and the Problem of Representing the State
pp. 51
Moral Agency and International Society
pp. 69
Collective Moral Agency and the Political Process
pp. 84
Constitutive Theory and Moral Accountability: Individuals, Institutions, and Dispersed Practices
pp. 100
When Agents Cannot Act: International Institutions as ‘Moral Patients’
pp. 119
NATO and the Individual Soldier as Moral Agents with Reciprocal Duties: Imbalance in the Kosovo Campaign
pp. 138
The Anti-Sweatshop Movement
pp. 159
The Responsibility of Collective External Bystanders in Cases of Genocide
pp. 183
The United Nations and the Fall of Srebrenica
pp. 207
On ‘Good Global Governance’, Institutional Design, and the Practices of Moral Agency
pp. 218
Global Justice: Aims, Arrangements, and Responsibilities
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