The Best Crossword Puzzle Maker Online
Powered by BrightSprout
Save Status:
or to save your progress. The page will not refresh.
Controls:
SPACEBAR SWITCHES TYPING DIRECTION
Answer Key:
Edit a Copy:
Make Your Own:
Crossword Word Search Worksheet
Rate This Puzzle:
Log in or sign up to rate this puzzle.

Moral Dimensions of Conflict

Across
A belief that it is never right to take part in war, even in self-defence. They think that the value of human life is so high that nothing can justify killing a person deliberately.
acts of hostile military action against a sovereign country that is not in self defense
During a war many pacifists will refuse to fight, but some will take part in activities that seek to reduce the harm of war; e.g. by driving ambulances, but other pacifists will refuse to take part in any activity that might support the war. Most democratic countries accept that people have the right of conscientious objection to military service, but they usually expect the objector to undertake some form of public service as an alternative.
an action carried out during the conduct of a war that violates accepted international rules of war.
These individuals are against war and violence in principle, but they accept that there may be circumstances when war will be less bad than the alternative. Conditional pacifists usually base their moral code on Utilitarian principles - it's the bad consequences that make it wrong to resort to war or violence.
acts that involve the enslavement, persecution, brutality or murder of non-combatants or the extermination of certain groups of people
Who said this phrase, war is cruelty.
Justice in resorting to war
That part of international law that regulates the conduct of armed hostilities. It is often called the “law of armed conflict.” The law of war encompasses all international law for the conduct of hostilities binding on the United States or its individual citizens, including treaties and international agreements to which the United States is a party, and applicable customary international law.
Down
acts that violate customary war time practices
Jus Bellum Iustum
Jus post bellum
the belief that any violence, including war, is unjustifiable under any circumstances, and that all disputes should be settled by peaceful means.
The belief that it is a matter of degree, and only oppose wars involving weapons of mass destruction - nuclear or chemical and biological weapons - either because of the uniquely devastating consequences of such weapons, or because a war that uses such weapons is not 'winnable'.
the attitude or practice of accepting a situation as it is and being prepared to deal with it accordingly
Justice in the conduct of war