Although most humanitarians advocate more international intervention in Darfur, some analysts urge the opposite on grounds that intervention has backfired due to the problem of moral hazard. These contrarians argue that the expectation of bene- fiting from intervention is what emboldens Darfur’s rebels to fight, which provokes state-sponsored retaliation against their perceived civilian supporters, thereby exac- erbating and prolonging the humanitarian emergency. This article tests the moral- hazard hypothesis against four other potential explanations for why Darfur’s mili- tants launched and perpetuated their rebellion despite being unable to protect their civilians from genocidal retaliation. The evidence indicates that moral hazard— the ...
Invoking memories and imagery from the Holocaust and other German atrocities during World War II, ma...
“What would happen if we thought of Darfur as we do of Iraq, as a place with a history and politics—...
Is there now a right to unilateral humanitarian intervention in a post-Iraq, post-Darfur world? This...
Although most humanitarians advocate more international intervention in Darfur, some analysts urge t...
The ancient concept of humanitarian intervention has become the subject of renewed debate and discus...
This article explores a perverse consequence of the emerging norm of humanitarian intervention, or ‘...
The chasm between normative development and international practice regarding humanitarian interventi...
Most major regional conflict – Bosnia, Kosovo, Rwanda, and Somalia – have been portrayed and explain...
Although the war in Liberia in July 2003 claimed hundreds of lives, the international community was ...
This article explores the role of the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) in the international response ...
The humanitarian crisis in Darfur presents one of the greatest challenges to the international commu...
Persistent ethnic conflict in Darfur has been met by third-party interventions with varying degrees ...
2nd Place at the 2015 Denman Undergraduate Research Forum in Social and Behavioral SciencesArts and ...
The international community has responded to the crisis in Darfur in a seemingly haphazard manner. Y...
This article is to demonstrate that the current crisis in Darfur is not a spontaneous insurgency at ...
Invoking memories and imagery from the Holocaust and other German atrocities during World War II, ma...
“What would happen if we thought of Darfur as we do of Iraq, as a place with a history and politics—...
Is there now a right to unilateral humanitarian intervention in a post-Iraq, post-Darfur world? This...
Although most humanitarians advocate more international intervention in Darfur, some analysts urge t...
The ancient concept of humanitarian intervention has become the subject of renewed debate and discus...
This article explores a perverse consequence of the emerging norm of humanitarian intervention, or ‘...
The chasm between normative development and international practice regarding humanitarian interventi...
Most major regional conflict – Bosnia, Kosovo, Rwanda, and Somalia – have been portrayed and explain...
Although the war in Liberia in July 2003 claimed hundreds of lives, the international community was ...
This article explores the role of the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) in the international response ...
The humanitarian crisis in Darfur presents one of the greatest challenges to the international commu...
Persistent ethnic conflict in Darfur has been met by third-party interventions with varying degrees ...
2nd Place at the 2015 Denman Undergraduate Research Forum in Social and Behavioral SciencesArts and ...
The international community has responded to the crisis in Darfur in a seemingly haphazard manner. Y...
This article is to demonstrate that the current crisis in Darfur is not a spontaneous insurgency at ...
Invoking memories and imagery from the Holocaust and other German atrocities during World War II, ma...
“What would happen if we thought of Darfur as we do of Iraq, as a place with a history and politics—...
Is there now a right to unilateral humanitarian intervention in a post-Iraq, post-Darfur world? This...