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[Lecture] Humane: How the United States Abandoned Peace and Reinvented War
Oct. 26, 2022


Speaker: Prof. Samuel Moyn, Yale University

Host: Prof. Chen Yifeng, School of Law, Peking University

Time: 19:00-21:00 pm, October 26, 2022, GMT+8

Venue: Zoom Meeting ID: 871 5897 8731

Biopgraphy:

Samuel Moyn is Chancellor Kent Professor of Law and History at Yale University. He received a doctorate in modern European history from the University of California-Berkeley in 2000 and a law degree from Harvard University in 2001. He came to Yale from Harvard University, where he was Jeremiah Smith, Jr. Professor of Law and Professor of History. Before this, he spent thirteen years in the Columbia University history department, where he was most recently James Bryce Professor of European Legal History. His areas of interest in legal scholarship include international law, human rights, the law of war, and legal thought, in both historical and current perspective. In intellectual history, he has worked on a diverse range of subjects, especially twentieth-century European moral and political theory.

Abstract:

In the years since 9/11, if not before Americans entered an age of endless war. With little debate or discussion, the United States carries out military operations around the globe. It hardly matters who’s president or whether liberals or conservatives operate the levers of power. The United States exercises dominion everywhere. In his recent book reprised in this talk, Humane: How the United States Abandoned Peace and Reinvented War, Samuel Moyn asks a troubling but urgent question: What if efforts to make war more ethical—to ban torture and limit civilian casualties—have only shored up the military enterprise and made it sturdier? To advance this case, Moyn looks back at a century and a half of passionate arguments about the ethics of using force.

Source: Peking University International Law