@article{5da5c82e2629473d8fb451e1f46a5992,
title = "Kicking Bodies and Damning Souls: The Danger of Harming “Innocent” Individuals While Punishing “Delinquent” States",
author = "Toni Erskine",
note = "An earlier version of this article was presented at the panel “Responding to {\textquoteleft}Delinquent{\textquoteright} Institutions in International Relations” at the 2006 Annual Convention of the International Studies Association in San Diego, California, March 22–25, and at “{\textquoteleft}No Soul to Be Damned, No Body to Be Kicked{\textquoteright}: Responding to {\textquoteleft}Delinquent{\textquoteright} Institutions in International Relations,” the 4th Workshop of the British Academy Network on Ethics, Institutions, and International Relations, Aberystwyth University, July 2007. Subsequent versions were presented at: Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada; Bielefeld University, Germany; the European University Institute, Florence, Italy; the University of Nottingham, United Kingdom; the University of Western Ontario, London, Canada; Queen's University, Belfast, Northern Ireland; the University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia; Warwick University, United Kingdom; and Oxford University, United Kingdom. I am very grateful for the invitations to present this argument as it evolved, and for the stimulating questions and comments I received from the audience at each venue. I would also like to thank Susanna Karlsson, Cian O{\textquoteright}Driscoll, and this journal's editors and five anonymous reviewers for their valuable suggestions on the penultimate version of this article. Finally, I owe a debt of gratitude to Anthony Lang, Larry May, Jonathan Leader Maynard, Onora O{\textquoteright}Neill, and Jennifer Welsh for generous advice on specific points.",
year = "2010",
month = oct,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1111/J.1747-7093.2010.00267.x",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
pages = "261--285",
journal = "Ethics and International Affairs",
issn = "0892-6794",
publisher = "Carnegie Council on Ethics and International Affairs",
number = "3",
}