Preface; Introduction: What is at stake?; 1: War and democracy; 2: Vietnam, Iraq and the 'war on terror': Deception, war propaganda and legislative approval; 3: Increasingly unrestrained war powers in the United States: from Truman to Trump; 4: Britain's royal war prerogative reasserted and reinforced; 5: From Whitehall to the White House: The war power in Australia-from legal subordination to political subservience; 6: The failure of reform proposals: An Australian case study; 7: War and dissent: sweeping domestic powers; 8: Contemporary preparations for wartime measures; 9: Martial law, official lawlessness and judicial complicity; 10: Can international law stop wars of aggression?; 11: Would referenda provide any alternative?; 12: Conclusions; Index
Michael Head is a professor of law at Western Sydney University, Australia.Kristian Boehringer is a senior lecturer in business law at Torrens University, Australia.
Even in the face of express constitutional restraints or legal
controls, democracies have stumbled into, and conducted, wars using
vast executive powers. By reference to the recent experiences of
the UK, USA and Australia, the authors have traced the serious
dangers of removing democratic checks on war making at the very
time when they are needed most. In the new age of nuclear
modernisation for first strike strategies this is a timely and
worrying exploration of national war powers. If the courts and the
people cannot exert effective restraints, how does one adapt
ferocious modern weapons and the need for speedy action to
preserving controls over unbridled power with catastrophic
potential? This is the dilemma explored by this work: a question
that we cannot afford to ignore.Hon. Michael
Kirby, AC CMG past Justice of the High Court of Australia
and chair of the UN Inquiry into Human Rights Violations in North
Korea.Michael Head and Kristian Boehringer have written an
important and accessible book that demonstrates that wars by the
US, UK and Australia in the name of democracy are actually launched
by, and prioritise the interests of, elites in ways that make a
mockery of democracy. This study deserves to be read widely and
will generate justified scepticism about 'democratic' calls to
war.Eric Herring
Professor of World Politics
School of Sociology, Politics and International Studies (SPAIS)
University of Bristol
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