Abstract
AbstractMoral injury describes the effects of violence on veterans beyond what trauma discourse can describe. I put moral injury in conversation with a separate but related concept, dirty hands. Focusing on Michael Walzer's framing of dirty hands and Jonathan Shay's understanding of moral injury, I argue that moral injury can be seen as part of the dirt of a political leader's dirty hands decisions. Such comparison can focus more attention on the broader institutional context in which such dirty hands decisions are executed, while contributing to the growing vocabulary of moral conflict, trauma, and harm.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
6 articles.
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1. 50 Years of Dirty Hands: An Overview;The Journal of Ethics;2023-10-17
2. Dirty Virtue;The Journal of Ethics;2023-09-04
3. A Taste of Armageddon: A Virtue Ethics Perspective on Autonomous Weapons and Moral Injury;Journal of Military Ethics;2022-01-02
4. Critiquing the Subject of Moral Injury;Journal of Military Ethics;2022-01-02
5. Bearing Bad News;International Journal of Philosophical Studies;2022-01-01