This comprehensive introduction offers a timely reassessment of key debates. The authors show expert insight into the big questions surrounding human protection, regime change, and consistency. In so doing, it acts as a much needed addition to any reading list.

Adrian Gallagher, University of Leeds, UK

This text is an important contribution to the humanitarian intervention literature. While most writers focus on either collective or individual intervention, this book harnesses both in interesting ways, incorporating the most up to date empirical research.

Fernando Tesón, Florida State University College of Law, USA

Two leading experts in the field re-examine the traditional understanding of humanitarian intervention in this major new text. The recent high-profile interventions in Iraq, Libya and Syria show the various international responses to impending or ongoing humanitarian crises, tracking the development from ad hoc military interventions to a more formalised international human rights regime. This evolution has fundamentally changed the way that states and international society think about, and respond to, atrocities. This textbook charts and explains the transformation, examines the challenges that confront it, and asks whether this new politics can withstand the growing crises in international politics. The human protection system is not perfect, but attempts to reduce both the incidence and lethality of atrocity crimes.

The authors argue that armed intervention alone is rarely sufficient to halt humanitarian atrocities, but must be understood within the wider context of peacemaking, including non-violent action. The requirement for states to intervene is codified in international law, and this raises important practical, political and moral questions for consistent humanitarian action.

Based on the authors' two decades of research, this text is the ideal companion for students of International Relations, taking modules on Humanitarian Intervention and the Responsibility to Protect at undergraduate and postgraduate levels.

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Introduction
Chapter 1 – Atrocities and Responses
Chapter 2 – Towards Human Protection
Chapter 3 – Protection Without Force
Chapter 4 – Intervention in Libya
Chapter 5 – The Problem of Regime Change
Chapter 6 – The Problem of Accountability
Chapter 7 – Consistency and Complications
Chapter 8 – Human Protection in Crisis?

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This up-to-date textbook by leading experts in humanitarian intervention addresses the key challenges in high-profile interventions in the Middle East
The first comprehensive understanding of humanitarian intervention as a broad scope of measures, mostly non-coercive

This series is designed to provide a forum and a stimulus for leading scholars to address big issues in world politics in an accessible but original manner. A key aim is to transcend the intellectual and disciplinary boundaries which have so often served to limit rather than enhance our understanding of the modern world.

Each book addresses a major issue or event that has had a formative influence on the 20th century or the 21st century world which is now emerging. Each makes its own distinctive contribution as well as providing an original but accessible guide to competing lines of interpretation. Taken as a whole, the series will rethink contemporary international politics in ways that are lively, informed and - above all - provocative.

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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781137488084
Publisert
2018-04-03
Utgiver
Vendor
Red Globe Press
Vekt
380 gr
Høyde
216 mm
Bredde
138 mm
Dybde
18 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
240

Biographical note

Alex J. Bellamy is Professor of Peace and Conflict Studies and Director of the Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect at the University of Queensland, Australia. He is also Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia and Non-Resident Senior Adviser at the International Peace Institute, New York. Recent books include, East Asia’s Other Miracle: Explaining the Decline of Mass Atrocities (Oxford, 2017), The Responsibility to Protect: A Defense (Oxford, 2015) and Massacres and Morality: Mass Killing in an Age of Civilian Immunity (Oxford, 2012).

Stephen McLoughlin is a Lecturer in International Relations, and Convener of the MA Peace Studies Program at Liverpool Hope. His research interests include mass atrocity prevention, the role of the UN in conceptualising and carrying out prevention, the causes of genocide and mass atrocities, and the Responsibility to Protect (R2P). He is also the deputy director of the Desmond Tutu Centre for War and Peace Studies.