Reviewing the Responsibility to Protect Origins Implementation and Controversies 1st Edition by Ramesh Thakur – Ebook PDF Instant Download/Delivery: 1351016784, 9781351016780
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Product details:
ISBN 10: 1351016784
ISBN 13: 9781351016780
Author: Ramesh Thakur
Reviewing the Responsibility to Protect Origins Implementation and Controversies 1st Table of contents:
1 Introduction
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ICISS and R2P
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Structure of the book
2 The Responsibility to Protect at 15
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From humanitarian intervention to R2P
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Prevention: work in progress
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Implementation gaps
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Actors: multilevel responsibility vacuum
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R2P scepticism
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Conclusion
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Notes
PART I Origins, meaning and evolution
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Power, principles, ideas and the normative international architecture
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The darker sides of Western virtue signalling
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Origins and evolution of R2P
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Notes
3 High-level panels
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The changing diplomatic landscape
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Commission diplomacy
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Impacts
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Explaining success
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Conclusion
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Notes
4 Rwanda, Kosovo and the International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty
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Policy setting: non-intervention as the default norm
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Policy challenge: mass atrocity crimes
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Policy controversy: an emerging norm of humanitarian intervention?
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Policy innovation: ICISS and the Responsibility to Protect
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Notes
5 From the right to persecute to the Responsibility to Protect: Feuerbachian inversions of rights and responsibilities in state–citizen relations
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The Feuerbachian analogy
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The Westphalian protection racket
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Sovereign legitimacy – domestic and international
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Developing countries and sovereignty
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Concrete challenges
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The United Nations: an organisation of, by and for sovereign states?
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The logic of Feuerbachian inversion: sovereign rights are human rights
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Notes
6 From humanitarian intervention to R2P: cosmetic or consequential?
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Annan’s ‘challenge of humanitarian intervention’
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Political
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Conceptual
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Normative
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Procedural
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Operational
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Conclusion
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Notes
PART II Implementation controversies
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Libya
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Structural flaws as the explanation for R2P failures in Libya
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Resuscitating the responsibility to rebuild
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R2P is a global normative answer to a universal moral failing
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Notes
7 R2P after Libya and Syria: engaging emerging powers
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R2P: between unilateral intervention and institutional indifference
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Libya 2011
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Syria 2012
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Rebalancing the normative order?
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Notes
8 R2P’s ‘structural’ problems: a response to Roland Paris
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R2P vs. humanitarian intervention, protective or otherwise
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Confusing the structural dilemmas of the use of force and R2P implementation
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Libya and Syria as R2P hard cases
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Ways forward?
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Conclusion
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Notes
9 The UN Secretary-General and the forgotten third R2P responsibility
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Twenty-first century international interventions
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The shift from ‘humanitarian intervention’ to ‘the Responsibility to Protect’
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The responsibility to rebuild
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The Secretary-General as an actor
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Conclusion
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Notes
PART III Gaps in and demands for atrocity prevention
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Who will protect the Palestinians?
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Non-intervention in Syria
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Notes
10 Protection gaps for civilian victims of political violence
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Africa and the civilian protection agenda
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Limitations on the use of force in UN peace operations
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A gap analysis
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R2P and POC as sibling protection norms
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Remaining protection gaps
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Conclusion
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Notes
11 Atrocity crimes and global governance
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Twin norms: duty to prosecute and responsibility to protect
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Sources of demand
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Mixed motives
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African agency
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The way forward
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Conclusion
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Notes
12 Retrospect and prospect
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Looking back
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