Table of Contents
Introduction:reconsidering Westphalia's legacy for religion and international politics /John D. Carlson,Erik C. Owens --Themoral measurement of war: a tradition of change and continuity /J. Bryan Hehir --Ethical implications of Kosovo operations /James P. McCarthy --Aneditor's view of Kosovo: dilemmas and criteria for humanitarian intervention /Margaret O'Brien Steinfels --Just war, realism, and humanitarian intervention /Jean Bethke Elshtain --Justice, political authority, and armed conflict: challenges to sovereignty and the just conduct of war /John Kelsay --Religious concomitants of transnationalism: from a universal church to a universal religiosity? /Susanne Hoeber Rudolph --Thefuture of sovereignty: a Christian realist perspective /Robin W. Lovin --Serving two masters? affirming religious belief and human rights in a pluralistic world /R. Scott Appleby --Trials, tribunals, and tribulations of sovereignty: crimes against humanity and the imago Dei /John D. Carlson --Weighing sovereignty in the "sit room": does it enter or end the debate? /Robert L. Gallucci --Religious allegiance and politcal sovereignty: an irreconcilable tension? /Paul J. Griffiths --Sacred nonsovereignty /Fred Dallmayr --Conclusion.Sovereignty after September 11: what has changed? /Erik C. Owens --Afterword.Confessions of a former Arabist /Joshua Mitchell.