Intervention for human protection is a key component of liberal thinking on world order. It is as old as the states system itself. A defence of intervention on humanitarian grounds can be found in Grotius' Laws of War and Peace, and it featured in the doctrine and practice of European great powers during the period when European hegemony was consolidated.1 The British effort to abolish the trade in slaves in the early-to-mid-nineteenth century is a case in point, a practice that was recently described as ‘the most costly international moral action recorded in modern history‘. Despite the longue durée of the practice, protective intervention remains both institutionally complex and normatively contested in world order today. The fissures in ...
The Responsibility to Protect (RtoP) norm is usually framed in apolitical terms of civilian protecti...
In spite of the current preoccupations, in the United States and in the United Nations, with the war...
The responsibility to protect (R2P) is both a license for and a leash against forcible intervention....
There has been intense debate on the appropriateness of interventions in sovereign states. This has ...
Since the Treaty of Westphalia, sovereignty has been backed by the norm of nonintervention. By cont...
One of the most challenging issues concerning the doctrine of the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) is...
On March 17 2011 the UN Security Council passed resolution 1973 authorising the use of force for civ...
On March 17 2011 the UN Security Council passed resolution 1973 authorising the use of force for civ...
intervention in Libya have been widely hailed as events of historic importance. And rightly so. Alth...
Miliary intervention remains a controversial part of human protection. Indispensable in some circums...
The question of protecting civilians and vulnerable groups from the aggression, violation and abuse ...
The concept of responsibility to protect is the latest manifestation of a post-Cold War process of l...
The concept of responsibility to protect is the latest manifestation of a post-Cold War process of l...
Humanitarian intervention lies at the fault-line in international relations between the principles o...
Humanitarian intervention lies at the fault-line in international relations between the principles o...
The Responsibility to Protect (RtoP) norm is usually framed in apolitical terms of civilian protecti...
In spite of the current preoccupations, in the United States and in the United Nations, with the war...
The responsibility to protect (R2P) is both a license for and a leash against forcible intervention....
There has been intense debate on the appropriateness of interventions in sovereign states. This has ...
Since the Treaty of Westphalia, sovereignty has been backed by the norm of nonintervention. By cont...
One of the most challenging issues concerning the doctrine of the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) is...
On March 17 2011 the UN Security Council passed resolution 1973 authorising the use of force for civ...
On March 17 2011 the UN Security Council passed resolution 1973 authorising the use of force for civ...
intervention in Libya have been widely hailed as events of historic importance. And rightly so. Alth...
Miliary intervention remains a controversial part of human protection. Indispensable in some circums...
The question of protecting civilians and vulnerable groups from the aggression, violation and abuse ...
The concept of responsibility to protect is the latest manifestation of a post-Cold War process of l...
The concept of responsibility to protect is the latest manifestation of a post-Cold War process of l...
Humanitarian intervention lies at the fault-line in international relations between the principles o...
Humanitarian intervention lies at the fault-line in international relations between the principles o...
The Responsibility to Protect (RtoP) norm is usually framed in apolitical terms of civilian protecti...
In spite of the current preoccupations, in the United States and in the United Nations, with the war...
The responsibility to protect (R2P) is both a license for and a leash against forcible intervention....