’Events from Kosovo in the 1990s to Syria today make it clear that we need a renewed focus on responding to massive threats to human life. Responsibility to Protect and Sovereignty offers a timely and focused response to policy and legal challenges and is a necessary and important read.’ Philippe Sands, University College London, UK ’As the world continues to witness mass atrocities against innocent populations, this book helps us understand the obstacles to effective life-saving interventions. It illuminates the promise of the Responsibility to Protect as a concept that can help every nation on earth fulfill its cardinal duty to protect its own citizens from genocide, war crimes, crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing.’ Abiodun William, President, The Hague Institute for Global Justice, Netherlands
Introduction 1. A Philosophical Underpinning for a State’s "Responsibility to Protect" 2. Intercultural Judgement and The Role of a Sensus Communis 3. Hannah Arendt’s "Right to Have Rights" and Human Security 4. The Scope of the "Responsibility to Prevent": A Remit for Intervention? 5. The Legal Character of the Responsibility to Protect 6. Distant Strangers and Our Responsibility to Protect