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  1.  2
    Just War Theory for Morale and Moral Injury: Beyond Individual Resilience.Tine Molendijk - 2025 - Journal of Military Ethics 23 (3):1-18.
    Issues of moral well-being among soldiers, such as morale and moral injury, are predominantly approached as individual and psychological concerns. Current interventions tend to emphasize bolstering soldiers’ individual resilience by instilling a sense of justification and purpose. Yet, paradoxically, such an approach can foster behavior in soldiers that later results in deep regrets and a sense of betrayal toward military and political leaders. This article starts from the contention that issues of morale and moral injury should also be addressed at (...)
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    Bring Them Home: Creating a Humane and Enforceable POW Parole System.Maciej Zając - 2025 - Journal of Military Ethics 23 (3):1-19.
    There are several strong moral reasons for restoring the practice of parole for prisoners of war (POWs), that is, allowing them to spend their POW internment in a neutral country or in their own country provided they abstain from any military activity. This article makes an ethical case for parole, while discussing thoroughly theoretical as well as practical arguments against its reintroduction. The article suggests ways to create a reliable, internationally recognized way of paroling POWs. It concludes that the reintroduction (...)
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