Jus ad bellum (Latin for "Law to War"; see also the Just War Theory) are a set of criteria that are consulted
before engaging in war, in order to determine whether entering into war is
justifiable. Jus ad bellum is sometimes considered a part of the laws of war, although the term "laws of war" can also be
considered to refer to jus in bello, which concerns whether a war is conducted
justly (regardless of whether the initiation of hostilities was just). See GEM Anscombe. An international agreement limiting the justifiable reasons for a country to
declare war against another is concerned with jus ad bellum. In addition
to bilateral non-aggression pacts, the twentieth century saw multilateral
treaties defining entirely new restrictions against going to war. The three most
notable examples are the Kellogg-Briand Pact outlawing war as an instrument of national
policy, the London Charter {known also as the Nuremberg Charter) defining
"crimes against peace" as one of three major categories of international crime
to be prosecuted after World War II, and the United Nations Charter, which binds nations to seek resolution
of disputes by peaceful means and requires authorization by the United Nations
before a nation may initiate any use of force against another, beyond repulsing
an immediate armed attack against its sovereign territory. By contrast,
agreements defining limits on acceptable conduct while already engaged in war
are considered "rules of war" and are referred to as the jus in bello.
Thus the Geneva Conventions are a set of jus in bello. Doctrines
concerning the protection of civilians in wartime, or the need for
"proportionality" when force is used, are addressed to issues of conduct within
a war, but the same doctrines can also shed light on the question of when it is
lawful (or unlawful) to go to war in the first place. These terms are used in discussions of international law and philosophy. According to Robert Kolb[1]: By this Kolb means that the terms themselves as legal terms, and the
subdivision of the doctrine of just war into the branches jus ad bellum
and jus in bello, are recent. The concept of just war and the term
bellum justum dates to St. Augustine of Hippo in the fifth century.
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