Introduction: The Ethics of War and Peace in a World of Contested and Fragmented SovereigntyDaniel R. Brunstetter and Jean-Vincent Holeindre Part I. What Frames Decisions to Intervene?1. Assessing (and Learning from) the Record of Humanitarian Intervention in the Post-Cold War EraAidan Hehir 2. Recognition Theory in Humanitarian InterventionThomas Lindemann and Alex Giacomelli 3. The Moral Justification for Military InterventionNigel Biggar 4. Making the World Safe for Preventive Force: South Korea and the US PrecedentKerstin Fisk and Jennifer M. Ramos 5. France and the American Drone Precedent: A Consequentialist Response to a Polemical CritiqueJean-Baptiste Jeangene VilmerPart II. Who Does the Fighting? 6. Pragmatism, the Just War Tradition, and an Ethical Approach to Private Military and Security CompaniesDeborah Avant 7. A Certain Idea of Grandeur: French Military Interventionism and Postcolonial ResponsibilityJean-Vincent Holeindre 8. The Signs of the Times: Classical Just War Thinking and Timing, and the Struggle Against JihadistsJohn Kelsay 9. Balancing Security, Risk, and Uncertainty in a World of Contested and Fragmented SovereigntyJohn R. Emery Part III. Do We Need New Ethical Frameworks? 10. Drones, Honor, and Fragmented Sovereignty: The Impact of New and Emerging Technology on the Warrior's CodeShannon E. French, Victoria Sisk, and Caroline Bass 11. The Purview of State-Sponsored Violence: Law Enforcement, Just War, and the Ethics of Limited ForceDaniel R. Brunstetter 12. Contesting Sovereignty: Human Security as a New Justification for War?Frederic Ramel Part IV. Is Victory Really Enough?13. Jus Post Bellum, Fractured Sovereignty, and the Limits of Postwar RehabilitationBrian Orend 14. After Disneyland: The (Hollow) Victory of Just WarCian O'Driscoll Conclusion: Toward the Future of the Ethics of War and PeaceDaniel R. Brunstetter and Jean-Vincent Holeindre List of Contributors Index