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Academic Journals
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From:Ethics & International Affairs (Vol. 23, Issue 4) Peer-Reviewed"The Moral Standing of States is the title of an essay Michael Walzer wrote in response to four critics of the theory of nonintervention defended in Just and Unjust Wars (of which I was one). (1) The essay was written...
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From:Journal of Church and State (Vol. 48, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedArguing About War. By Michael Walzer. New Haven, Conn.: Yale University Press, 2004. 224 pp. $25.00. Arguing About War is a collection of essays spanning two decades. The essays are short and readable for students,...
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From:First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life (Issue 146)ARGUING ABOUT WAR. By MICHAEL WALZER. Yale University Press. 208 pp. $25. Walzer, who has been influential in current thought about just and unjust wars, is a committed man of the left with a talent for challenging...
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From:Social Theory and Practice (Vol. 27, Issue 2) Peer-Reviewed"Perhaps the most problematic feature of my exposition is the use of the plural pronouns: we, our, ourselves, us. That ... [we all] share a common morality is the critical assumption ..." --Michael Walzer(1) Does...
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From:Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political Theory (Vol. 66, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedContra the prevalent way of thinking about the dirty-hands problem, this article suggests that dirty hands need not necessarily entail suffering and that a politician who does not suffer for his dirty-handed acts should...
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From:Theological Studies (Vol. 66, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedTHE JUST WAR REVISITED. By Oliver O'Donovan. Cambridge: Cambridge University, 2003. Pp. ix + 139. $19.99 ARGUING ABOUT WAR. By Michael Walzer. New Haven: Yale University, 2004. Pp. xv + 208. $25. Historian James...
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From:Ethics & International Affairs (Vol. 23, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThere is a country in Europe ... whose foreign policy is to let other nations alone.... Any attempt it makes to exert influence over them, even by persuasion, is rather in the service of others, than itself: to mediate...
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From:Theological Studies (Vol. 66, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedLIBERTY AND POWER: A DIALOGUE ON RELIGION AND U.S. FOREIGN POLICY IN AN UNJUST WORLD. By J. Bryan Hehir, Michael Walzer, Louise Richardson, Shibley Telhami, Charles Krauthammer, and James Lindsay. The Pew Forum...
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From:Social Theory and Practice (Vol. 30, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe events of September 11, 2001 and the dramatic increase in Arab terrorist activity in Israel throughout the last two years have placed the issue of combating terrorism at the forefront of moral philosophy. Curiously,...
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From:The Chronicle of Higher Education (Vol. 55, Issue 7)Byline: CAITLIN MORAN After roughly 55 years of independent publishing, Dissent, a left-leaning political magazine, will have its operations taken over by the University of Pennsylvania Press. A co-editor, Michael...
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From:First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life (Issue 78)Leftist educator Michael Walzer wrongly resists the success of free-market economics. Walzer should not believe a democratic America would be better served with less centrism in politics. Walzer's concern is largely due...
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From:The Review of Politics (Vol. 61, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThis article critically analyzes the work of Will Kymlicka, Charles Taylor, and Michael Walzer, three of the most important contemporary political philosophers writing on issues of multiculturalism. It uses the...
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From:Theoria: A Journal of Social and Political TheoryPeer-ReviewedIntroduction In his famous poem "Mending Wall" Robert Frost's narrator builds, alongside his neighbour, a stone wall that divides their respective lands (Frost 1947: 47-8). The narrator can see this joint activity as...
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From:The Hedgehog Review (Vol. 17, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedThe Paradox of Liberation: Secular Revolutions and Religious Counterrevolutions Michael Walzer New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2015. Michael Walzer has never thought small. The origins of radical...
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From:The Chronicle of Higher Education (Vol. 58, Issue 38)Byline: Jeffrey J. Williams Before all the talk about "public intellectuals," Michael Walzer was one. For 50 years, he has gone back and forth between positions at Princeton and Harvard Universities and then at the...
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From:Ethics & International Affairs (Vol. 21, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedLaw, Politics, and Morality in Judaism, Michael Walzer, ed. (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2006), 224 pp., $55 cloth, $17.95 paper. This volume of collected essays, most of which have been published in...
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From:Harvard Theological Review (Vol. 95, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThis dissertation explores the relation of Christian eschatology to political theory. Specifically, the question is whether and how eschatological images can be a source of social criticism. On the basis of Johann...
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From:Ethics & International Affairs (Vol. 23, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedSince 1989 we have witnessed a proliferation of efforts to develop international norms of the rights of ethnocultural minorities, such as the UN's 1992 Declaration on the Rights of Persons Belonging to National or...
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From:Ethics & International Affairs (Vol. 19, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedArguing about War, Michael Walzer (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2004), 224 pp., $25 cloth. A new book on the ethics of war by Michael Walzer is particularly welcome at this time. More than any other living...
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From:Columbia Journalism Review (Vol. 43, Issue 4) Peer-Reviewed50 YEARS OF DISSENT Edited by Nicolaus Mills and Michael Walzer Yale University Press 365 pp., $25 paper FIFTY YEARS OF THE TEXAS OBSERVER Edited by Char Miller Trinity University Press 429 pp., $40, $19.95 paper...