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Can Political Violence Ever Be Justified?. Edition No. 1. Political Theory Today

  • Book

  • 140 Pages
  • February 2019
  • John Wiley and Sons Ltd
  • ID: 5226952

Violence - from state coercion to wars and revolutions - remains an enduring global reality. But whereas it is often believed that the point of constitutional politics is to make violence unnecessary, others argue that it is an unavoidable element of politics.

In this lucid and erudite book, Elizabeth Frazer and Kimberly Hutchings address these issues using vivid contemporary and historic examples. They carefully explore the strategies that have been deployed to condone violence, either as means to certain ends or as an inherent facet of politics. Examining the complex questions raised by different types of violence, they conclude that, ultimately, all attempts to justify political violence fail.

This book will be essential introductory reading for students and scholars of the ethics and politics of political violence.

Table of Contents

Introduction: The Question of Political Violence

Chapter 1: Violence and Justification

Chapter 2: Simple justifications of simple violence

Chapter 3: Complicating matters

Chapter 4: The meaning of political violence

Chapter 5: Against the justification of political violence

Conclusion: Political Violence Can Never Be Justified

Sources and further reading

Authors

Elizabeth Frazer Kimberly Hutchings