just demands - meaning and definition. What is just demands
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What (who) is just demands - definition

SET OF CONCESSIONARY DEMANDS MADE BY IMPERIAL JAPAN TO CHINA DURING WORLD WAR I
Twenty-one Demands; Twenty-One Points; Twenty-one demands; 21 demands; 21 Demands; Twenty One Demands
  • China unprepared to answer 21 demands by Japan in 1915; Bradley in ''[[Chicago Daily News]]'' March 13, 1915
  • Eki Hioki (日置益)
  • Japanese Prime Minister [[Ōkuma Shigenobu]], under whose administration the Twenty-One Demands were drafted
  • "The Chinese's Acceptance of the Twenty-One Demands" signed by Yuan Shikai

Alexander Just         
  • Alexander Just
  • Alexander Just as a soldier during World War I
  • A Just–Hanaman light-bulb, Budapest, 1906
GERMAN-HUNGARIAN CHEMIST
Aleksandar Just; Sándor Just; Just, Alexander
Alexander Friedrich Just (12 April 1874, in Bremen – 30 May 1937, in Budapest) was an Austro-Hungarian chemist and inventor. Later, in Hungary he used the name Just Sándor Frigyes.
Just war theory         
  • 50px
DOCTRINE ABOUT WHEN A WAR IS ETHICALLY JUST
Just war; The Just War Theory; Just War Theory; Just War Doctrine; Just War doctrine; Unjust Aggressor; Bellum iustum; Bellum justum; The Just War; Just War theory; Just War tradition; The Just War tradition; Ethics of war; Just wars; Justwars; Just-war; Just-wars; War theory; Just War; Ius in bello; Just War Theory Doctrine; Unjust war; Justifiable war; Justified war
The just war theory () is a doctrine, also referred to as a tradition, of military ethics which is studied by military leaders, theologians, ethicists and policy makers. The purpose of the doctrine is to ensure that a war is morally justifiable through a series of criteria, all of which must be met for a war to be considered just.
Just-world hypothesis         
COGNITIVE BIAS THAT ASSUMES THAT ACTIONS WILL HAVE MORALLY FAIR AND FITTING CONSEQUENCES FOR THE ACTOR
Just world effect; Just World Hypothesis; Just World hypothesis; Just world hypothesis; Just-world effect; Belief in a Just World; Good world hypothesis; Just world phenomenon; Just world fallacy; Just-world fallacy; Just world theory; Just-world theory; Just-world phenomenon; Just World phenomenon; Belief in a just world; Just world; Reap what you sow; You reap what you sow; Just-World Hypothesis; Everything happens for a reason
The just-world hypothesis or just-world fallacy is the cognitive bias that assumes that "people get what they deserve" – that actions will have morally fair and fitting consequences for the actor. For example, the assumptions that noble actions will eventually be rewarded and evil actions will eventually be punished fall under this hypothesis.

Wikipedia

Twenty-One Demands

The Twenty-One Demands (Japanese: 対華21ヶ条要求, romanized: Taika Nijūikkajō Yōkyū; simplified Chinese: 二十一条; traditional Chinese: 二十一條; pinyin: Èrshíyī tiáo) was a set of demands made during the First World War by the Empire of Japan under Prime Minister Ōkuma Shigenobu to the government of the Republic of China on 18 January 1915. The secret demands would greatly extend Japanese control of China. Japan would keep the former German areas it had conquered at the start of World War I in 1914. It would be strong in Manchuria and South Mongolia. It would have an expanded role in railways. The most extreme demands (in section 5) would give Japan a decisive voice in finance, policing, and government affairs. The last part would make China in effect a protectorate of Japan, and thereby reduce Western influence. Japan was in a strong position, as the Western powers were in a stalemated world war with Germany. Britain and Japan had a military alliance since 1902, and in 1914 London had asked Tokyo to enter the war. Beijing published the secret demands and appealed to Washington and London. They were sympathetic and forced Tokyo to drop section 5. In the final 1916 settlement, Japan gave up its fifth set of demands. It gained a little in China, but lost a great deal of prestige and trust in Britain and the U.S.

The Chinese public responded with a spontaneous nationwide boycott of Japanese goods; Japan's exports to China fell drastically. Britain was affronted and no longer trusted Japan as an ally. With the First World War underway, Japan's position was strong and Britain's was weak; nevertheless, Britain (and the United States) forced Japan to drop the fifth set of demands that would have given Japan a large measure of control over the entire Chinese economy and ended the Open Door Policy. Japan and China reached a series of agreements which ratified the first four sets of goals on 25 May 1915.

Examples of use of just demands
1. Burma‘s rulers continue to defy the world‘s just demands to stop their vicious persecution.
2. And so a coalition of nations enforced the just demands of the world," he declared.
3. And when he refused, we enforced the just demands of the world.
4. We have no intention of going with the just demands of the world." And so, now, the world is reacting.
5. Saddam Hussein failed to meet the "just demands" of the world, Bush said for the 14th time, according to a search of the White House‘s Web site.