Harming the Beneficiaries of Humanitarian Intervention

Ethical Theory and Moral Practice 21 (5):1035-1050 (2018)
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Abstract

This paper challenges one line of argument which has been advanced to justify imposing risks of collateral harm on prospective beneficiaries of armed humanitarian interventions. This argument - the ‘Beneficiary Principle’ - holds that non-liable individuals’ immunity to being harmed as a side effect of just armed humanitarian interventions may be diminished by their prospects of benefiting from the intervention. Against this, I defend the view that beneficiary status does not morally distinguish beneficiaries from other non-liable individuals in such a way as to permit exposing them to greater risks of being harmed. The argument proceeds in four steps. I first show that the BP can neither be grounded in liability-based nor in lesser-evil justifications for harming. I then argue that a standalone justification for unintended harming based on beneficiary status would face at least two critical challenges. The first concerns the BP’s applicability to collectives; the second questions the normative weight we can plausibly ascribe to beneficiary status when beneficiaries are such by virtue of being victims of wrongful threats of harm. I argue that standing to benefit is morally irrelevant when the benefit consists in the mitigation or prevention of wrongful harms, and consequently suggest that the BP may only serve as a distributive principle in allocating risks of harm if it is disambiguated in a number of critical aspects and applied in a more narrowlydefined set of circumstances.

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Linda Eggert
Oxford University

References found in this work

Defensive Killing.Helen Frowe - 2014 - Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
Just And Unjust Wars.Michael Walzer - 1977 - New York: Basic Books.
War and Self Defense.David Rodin - 2002 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press.
Contractualism and Social Risk.Johann Frick - 2015 - Philosophy and Public Affairs 43 (3):175-223.
War and Self Defense.David Rodin - 2002 - Oxford, GB: Oxford University Press UK.

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