This article explores the potential of the responsibility to protect, having gained the support of the member states of the United Nations (UN) at the 2005 World Summit, as a framework for the UN to address genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity. It is argued that in order for the UN to harness this potential of the responsibility to protect a number of obstacles and challenges – normative, institutional and operational – must be overcome and that international human rights law has a central, if not pivotal, role in this regard thereby strengthening the responsibility to protect as a framework for the UN to address genocide, war crimes, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity
The responsibility to protect has succeeded humanitarian intervention as the primary conceptual fram...
This book examines responsibility in grave humanitarian crises, focusing on the international commun...
The responsibility to protect has succeeded humanitarian intervention as the primary conceptual fram...
This article examines the major milestones in the development of the notion of Responsibility to Pro...
The happenings of the last 30 years have brought the International Community to seek a solution to a...
This article traces the evolution of the responsibility to protect. It presents the operationalizati...
No abstractThis article provides a comprehensive review of the concept of‘responsibility to protect’...
This research focuses on the central theme of the Responsibility to Protect (R2P); a newly coined in...
At the 2005 World Summit, the world's leaders committed themselves to the "responsibility to protect...
The emergence of the concept of R2P has been characterized as the most dramatic and rapid normative ...
The context for this work is set by the proliferation of intrastate conflicts and the international ...
The Responsibility to Protect (RtoP) has generated a great deal of discussion on armed humanitarian ...
The thesis focuses on the responsibility to protect as a new concept of the international law design...
In 1994, genocide in the tiny landlocked nation of Rwanda, was the catalyst for a debate that would ...
The happenings of the last 30 years have brought the International Community to seek a solution to a...
The responsibility to protect has succeeded humanitarian intervention as the primary conceptual fram...
This book examines responsibility in grave humanitarian crises, focusing on the international commun...
The responsibility to protect has succeeded humanitarian intervention as the primary conceptual fram...
This article examines the major milestones in the development of the notion of Responsibility to Pro...
The happenings of the last 30 years have brought the International Community to seek a solution to a...
This article traces the evolution of the responsibility to protect. It presents the operationalizati...
No abstractThis article provides a comprehensive review of the concept of‘responsibility to protect’...
This research focuses on the central theme of the Responsibility to Protect (R2P); a newly coined in...
At the 2005 World Summit, the world's leaders committed themselves to the "responsibility to protect...
The emergence of the concept of R2P has been characterized as the most dramatic and rapid normative ...
The context for this work is set by the proliferation of intrastate conflicts and the international ...
The Responsibility to Protect (RtoP) has generated a great deal of discussion on armed humanitarian ...
The thesis focuses on the responsibility to protect as a new concept of the international law design...
In 1994, genocide in the tiny landlocked nation of Rwanda, was the catalyst for a debate that would ...
The happenings of the last 30 years have brought the International Community to seek a solution to a...
The responsibility to protect has succeeded humanitarian intervention as the primary conceptual fram...
This book examines responsibility in grave humanitarian crises, focusing on the international commun...
The responsibility to protect has succeeded humanitarian intervention as the primary conceptual fram...