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Beyond Military Humanitarian Intervention: From Assassination to Election Hacking?
Author(s) -
Alex Leveringhaus
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
philosophical journal of conflict and violence
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2559-9917
pISSN - 2559-9798
DOI - 10.22618/tp.pjcv.20215.1.139007
Subject(s) - humanitarian intervention , argument (complex analysis) , subversion , accountability , military medical ethics , interventionism (politics) , intervention (counseling) , drone , human rights , sociology , political science , law and economics , public relations , law , medicine , politics , information ethics , international relations , psychiatry , biology , genetics
This paper critically examines the implications of technology for the ethics of intervention and vice versa, especially regarding (but not limited to) the concept of military humanitarian intervention (MHI). To do so, it uses two recent pro-interventionist proposals as lenses through which to analyse the relationship between interventionism and technology. These are A. Altman and C.H. Wellman’s argument for the assassination of tyrannical leaders, and C. Fabre’s case for foreign electoral subversion. Existing and emerging technologies, the paper contends, play an important role in realising these proposals. This illustrates the potential of technology to facilitate interventionist practices that transcend the traditional concept of MHI, with its reliance on kinetic force and large-scale military operations. The question, of course, is whether this is normatively desirable. Here, the paper takes a critical view. While there is no knockdown argument against either assassination or electoral subversion for humanitarian purposes, both approaches face similar challenges, most notably regarding public accountability, effectiveness, and appropriate regulatory frameworks. The paper concludes by making alternative suggestions for how technology can be utilised to improve the protection of human rights. Overall, the paper shows that an engagement with technology is fruitful and necessary for the ethics of intervention.

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