“SOMETHING WORTH DEFENDING”: RAWLS AND THE RIGHT TO SELF-DEFENSE IN THE LAW OF PEOPLES
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Peri Roberts’s article examines John Rawls's justification for the right to self-defense (RSD) in The Law of Peoples. He argues that Rawls provides a compelling response to David Rodin’s skepticism by treating the RSD as a conditional right assigned only to well-ordered societies. For Rawls, these states are "something worth defending" because they represent the actual possibility of a peaceful international order and sustain "reasonable hope" against the great evils of history. THIS ABSTRACT IS GENERATED WITH ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE.
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