This volume provides the most comprehensive study of the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) principle, and presents an authoritative and comparative examination of the emergence of this principle.
Alex Bellamy is Director of the Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect and Professor of Peace and Conflict Studies at The University of Queensland, Australia. He is also Non-Resident Senior Adviser at the International Peace Institute, New York and Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia. He currently serves as Secretary of the High Level Advisory Panel on the Responsibility to Protect in Southeast Asia, chaired by Dr. Surin Pitsuwan. Recent books include Responsibility to Protect: A Defense (OUP, 2015) and Massacres and Morality (OUP, 2012). ; Tim Dunne is Executive Dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences and Professor of International Relations at The University of Queensland, where he is also a Senior Researcher at the Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect. Tim is a widely published author, including most recently the co-edited book Liberal World Orders (Oxford: OUP/British Academy 2013). He is currently completing a co-edited book for publication with Oxford in 2016, on The Globalisation of International Society.
Alex Bellamy and Tim Dunne: Preface; PART I: INTRODUCTION; 1 Alex Bellamy and Tim Dunne: R2P in Theory and Practice; PART II: HISTORY; 2 Davide Rodogno: Humanitarian Intervention in the Nineteenth-Century; 3 Tim Dunne and Eglantine Staunton: The Genocide Convention & Cold War Humanitarian Intervention; 4 Thomas G. Weiss: The Turbulent 1990's: R2P Precedents and Prospects; 5 Roberta Cohen and Francis Deng: Sovereignty as Responsibility: Building Block for R2P; 6 Ramesh Thakur: Rwanda, Kosovo and the International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty; 7 Charles Cater and David Malone: The Genesis of R2P: Kofi Annan's Intervention Dilemma; PART III: THEORY; 8 Melissa Labonte: R2P's Status as a Norm; 9 Luke Glanville: Sovereignty; 10 Toni Erskine: Moral Agents of Protection and Supplementary Responsibilities to Protect; 11 Nigel Rodley: R2P and International Law: A Paradigm Shift?; 12 Faith Mabera and Yolanda Spies: How Well Does R2P Travel Beyond the West?; Justin Morris and Nicholas Wheeler: The Responsibility Not to Veto: A Responsibility too far?; PART IV: UN ORDER; 14 Alex Bellamy: UN Security Council; 15 Megan Schmidt: UN General Assembly; 16 Edward Luck: Getting There, Being There: The Dual Roles of the Special Adviser; 17 Ekkehard Strauss: UN Human Rights Council and the High Commissioner for Human Rights; 18 David Carment, Sean Winchester, and Joe Landry: The Role of Regional Organisations: A Responsibility Gap?; PART V: GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES; 19 Kwesi Aning and Frank Okyere: The African Union; 20 Sarah Teitt: Asia Pacific and South Asia; 21 Chiara de Franco, Christoph Meyer, and Karen E. Smith: Europe and the European Union; 22 Ekatarina Stepanova: Russia; 23 Monica Serrano: Latin America; 24 Fateh Azzam and Coralie Hindawi: Middle East and North Africa; 25 Bruce Jentleson: United States; PART VI: CROSS-CUTTING THEMES; 26 Sara Davies: Gender; 27 Roland Paris: The Blurry Boundary between Peacebuilding and R2P; 28 Paul Williams: The R2P, Protection of Civilians, and Peacekeeping Operations; 29 Hugo Slim: Saving Individuals from the Scourge of War: Complementarity and Tension Between R2P and Humanitarian Action; 30 Taylor Seybolt: The Use of Force; 31 Ruben Reike: Conflict Prevention and the R2P; 32 Phil Orchard: Refugees and Displaced People; 33 Oliver Stuenkel: Responsibility while Protecting; 34 Jason Ralph: The International Criminal Court; 35 Jeremy Farrall: The use of UN sanctions to address mass atrocities; 36 Michael Doyle: The Politics of Global Humanitarianism: The R2P before and after Libya; PART VII: CASES; 37 Charles Hunt: Cote d'Ivoire; 38 Jess Gifkins: Darfur; 39 Arthur Boutellis: Democratic Republic of the Congo; 40 Serena Sharma: Kenya; 41 Simon Adams: Libya; 42 John Karlsrud: Mali; 43 Jurgen Haacke: Myanmar; 44 Boris Kondoch: North Korea; 45 Walter Lotze: Somalia; 46 Alison Giffen: South Sudan; 47 Kim Nackers: Sri Lanka; 48 Bessma Momani and Tanzeel Hakak: Syria; PART VIII: FACING THE FUTURE; 49 Gareth Evans: R2P: The Next Ten Years; 50 Rosemary Foot: The State, Development, and Humanitarianism: China's Shaping of the Trajectory of the R2P; 51 Kishore Mabubhani: Embedding R2P in a New Universal Declaration of Human Responsibilities; 52 Lloyd Axworthy: Resetting the Narrative on Peace and Security: R2P in the Next Ten Years; 53 Jennifer Welsh: R2P's Next Ten Years: Deepening and Extending the Consensus
Show moreThis volume provides the most comprehensive study of the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) principle, and presents an authoritative and comparative examination of the emergence of this principle.
Alex Bellamy is Director of the Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect and Professor of Peace and Conflict Studies at The University of Queensland, Australia. He is also Non-Resident Senior Adviser at the International Peace Institute, New York and Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia. He currently serves as Secretary of the High Level Advisory Panel on the Responsibility to Protect in Southeast Asia, chaired by Dr. Surin Pitsuwan. Recent books include Responsibility to Protect: A Defense (OUP, 2015) and Massacres and Morality (OUP, 2012). ; Tim Dunne is Executive Dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences and Professor of International Relations at The University of Queensland, where he is also a Senior Researcher at the Asia Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect. Tim is a widely published author, including most recently the co-edited book Liberal World Orders (Oxford: OUP/British Academy 2013). He is currently completing a co-edited book for publication with Oxford in 2016, on The Globalisation of International Society.
Alex Bellamy and Tim Dunne: Preface; PART I: INTRODUCTION; 1 Alex Bellamy and Tim Dunne: R2P in Theory and Practice; PART II: HISTORY; 2 Davide Rodogno: Humanitarian Intervention in the Nineteenth-Century; 3 Tim Dunne and Eglantine Staunton: The Genocide Convention & Cold War Humanitarian Intervention; 4 Thomas G. Weiss: The Turbulent 1990's: R2P Precedents and Prospects; 5 Roberta Cohen and Francis Deng: Sovereignty as Responsibility: Building Block for R2P; 6 Ramesh Thakur: Rwanda, Kosovo and the International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty; 7 Charles Cater and David Malone: The Genesis of R2P: Kofi Annan's Intervention Dilemma; PART III: THEORY; 8 Melissa Labonte: R2P's Status as a Norm; 9 Luke Glanville: Sovereignty; 10 Toni Erskine: Moral Agents of Protection and Supplementary Responsibilities to Protect; 11 Nigel Rodley: R2P and International Law: A Paradigm Shift?; 12 Faith Mabera and Yolanda Spies: How Well Does R2P Travel Beyond the West?; Justin Morris and Nicholas Wheeler: The Responsibility Not to Veto: A Responsibility too far?; PART IV: UN ORDER; 14 Alex Bellamy: UN Security Council; 15 Megan Schmidt: UN General Assembly; 16 Edward Luck: Getting There, Being There: The Dual Roles of the Special Adviser; 17 Ekkehard Strauss: UN Human Rights Council and the High Commissioner for Human Rights; 18 David Carment, Sean Winchester, and Joe Landry: The Role of Regional Organisations: A Responsibility Gap?; PART V: GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES; 19 Kwesi Aning and Frank Okyere: The African Union; 20 Sarah Teitt: Asia Pacific and South Asia; 21 Chiara de Franco, Christoph Meyer, and Karen E. Smith: Europe and the European Union; 22 Ekatarina Stepanova: Russia; 23 Monica Serrano: Latin America; 24 Fateh Azzam and Coralie Hindawi: Middle East and North Africa; 25 Bruce Jentleson: United States; PART VI: CROSS-CUTTING THEMES; 26 Sara Davies: Gender; 27 Roland Paris: The Blurry Boundary between Peacebuilding and R2P; 28 Paul Williams: The R2P, Protection of Civilians, and Peacekeeping Operations; 29 Hugo Slim: Saving Individuals from the Scourge of War: Complementarity and Tension Between R2P and Humanitarian Action; 30 Taylor Seybolt: The Use of Force; 31 Ruben Reike: Conflict Prevention and the R2P; 32 Phil Orchard: Refugees and Displaced People; 33 Oliver Stuenkel: Responsibility while Protecting; 34 Jason Ralph: The International Criminal Court; 35 Jeremy Farrall: The use of UN sanctions to address mass atrocities; 36 Michael Doyle: The Politics of Global Humanitarianism: The R2P before and after Libya; PART VII: CASES; 37 Charles Hunt: Cote d'Ivoire; 38 Jess Gifkins: Darfur; 39 Arthur Boutellis: Democratic Republic of the Congo; 40 Serena Sharma: Kenya; 41 Simon Adams: Libya; 42 John Karlsrud: Mali; 43 Jurgen Haacke: Myanmar; 44 Boris Kondoch: North Korea; 45 Walter Lotze: Somalia; 46 Alison Giffen: South Sudan; 47 Kim Nackers: Sri Lanka; 48 Bessma Momani and Tanzeel Hakak: Syria; PART VIII: FACING THE FUTURE; 49 Gareth Evans: R2P: The Next Ten Years; 50 Rosemary Foot: The State, Development, and Humanitarianism: China's Shaping of the Trajectory of the R2P; 51 Kishore Mabubhani: Embedding R2P in a New Universal Declaration of Human Responsibilities; 52 Lloyd Axworthy: Resetting the Narrative on Peace and Security: R2P in the Next Ten Years; 53 Jennifer Welsh: R2P's Next Ten Years: Deepening and Extending the Consensus
Show moreAlex Bellamy and Tim Dunne: Preface
PART I: INTRODUCTION
1: Alex Bellamy and Tim Dunne: R2P in Theory and Practice
PART II: HISTORY
2: Davide Rodogno: Humanitarian Intervention in the
Nineteenth-Century
3: Tim Dunne and Eglantine Staunton: The Genocide Convention & Cold
War Humanitarian Intervention
4: Thomas G. Weiss: The Turbulent 1990's: R2P Precedents and
Prospects
5: Roberta Cohen and Francis Deng: Sovereignty as Responsibility:
Building Block for R2P
6: Ramesh Thakur: Rwanda, Kosovo and the International Commission
on Intervention and State Sovereignty
7: Charles Cater and David Malone: The Genesis of R2P: Kofi Annan's
Intervention Dilemma
PART III: THEORY
8: Melissa Labonte: R2P's Status as a Norm
9: Luke Glanville: Sovereignty
10: Toni Erskine: Moral Agents of Protection and Supplementary
Responsibilities to Protect
11: Nigel Rodley: R2P and International Law: A Paradigm Shift?
12: Faith Mabera and Yolanda Spies: How Well Does R2P Travel Beyond
the West?
Justin Morris and Nicholas Wheeler: The Responsibility Not to Veto:
A Responsibility too far?
PART IV: UN ORDER
14: Alex Bellamy: UN Security Council
15: Megan Schmidt: UN General Assembly
16: Edward Luck: Getting There, Being There: The Dual Roles of the
Special Adviser
17: Ekkehard Strauss: UN Human Rights Council and the High
Commissioner for Human Rights
18: David Carment, Sean Winchester, and Joe Landry: The Role of
Regional Organisations: A Responsibility Gap?
PART V: GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES
19: Kwesi Aning and Frank Okyere: The African Union
20: Sarah Teitt: Asia Pacific and South Asia
21: Chiara de Franco, Christoph Meyer, and Karen E. Smith: Europe
and the European Union
22: Ekatarina Stepanova: Russia
23: Mónica Serrano: Latin America
24: Fateh Azzam and Coralie Hindawi: Middle East and North
Africa
25: Bruce Jentleson: United States
PART VI: CROSS-CUTTING THEMES
26: Sara Davies: Gender
27: Roland Paris: The Blurry Boundary between Peacebuilding and
R2P
28: Paul Williams: The R2P, Protection of Civilians, and
Peacekeeping Operations
29: Hugo Slim: Saving Individuals from the Scourge of War:
Complementarity and Tension Between R2P and Humanitarian Action
30: Taylor Seybolt: The Use of Force
31: Ruben Reike: Conflict Prevention and the R2P
32: Phil Orchard: Refugees and Displaced People
33: Oliver Stuenkel: Responsibility while Protecting
34: Jason Ralph: The International Criminal Court
35: Jeremy Farrall: The use of UN sanctions to address mass
atrocities
36: Michael Doyle: The Politics of Global Humanitarianism: The R2P
before and after Libya
PART VII: CASES
37: Charles Hunt: Cote d'Ivoire
38: Jess Gifkins: Darfur
39: Arthur Boutellis: Democratic Republic of the Congo
40: Serena Sharma: Kenya
41: Simon Adams: Libya
42: John Karlsrud: Mali
43: Jurgen Haacke: Myanmar
44: Boris Kondoch: North Korea
45: Walter Lotze: Somalia
46: Alison Giffen: South Sudan
47: Kim Nackers: Sri Lanka
48: Bessma Momani and Tanzeel Hakak: Syria
PART VIII: FACING THE FUTURE
49: Gareth Evans: R2P: The Next Ten Years
50: Rosemary Foot: The State, Development, and Humanitarianism:
China's Shaping of the Trajectory of the R2P
51: Kishore Mabubhani: Embedding R2P in a New Universal Declaration
of Human Responsibilities
52: Lloyd Axworthy: Resetting the Narrative on Peace and Security:
R2P in the Next Ten Years
53: Jennifer Welsh: R2P's Next Ten Years: Deepening and Extending
the Consensus
Alex Bellamy is Director of the Asia Pacific Centre for the
Responsibility to Protect and Professor of Peace and Conflict
Studies at The University of Queensland, Australia. He is also
Non-Resident Senior Adviser at the International Peace Institute,
New York and Fellow of the Academy of Social Sciences in Australia.
He currently serves as Secretary of the High Level Advisory Panel
on the Responsibility to Protect in Southeast Asia, chaired by Dr.
Surin Pitsuwan.
Recent books include Responsibility to Protect: A Defense (OUP,
2015) and Massacres and Morality (OUP, 2012).
Tim Dunne is Executive Dean of the Faculty of Humanities and Social
Sciences and Professor of International Relations at The University
of Queensland, where he is also a Senior Researcher at the Asia
Pacific Centre for the Responsibility to Protect. Tim is a widely
published author, including most recently the co-edited book
Liberal World Orders (Oxford: OUP/British Academy 2013). He is
currently completing a co-edited book for publication with Oxford
in 2016, on The Globalisation of
International Society.
Targeted at diplomats, scholars and activists alike, this
wide-ranging volume more than lives up to its purposes...It is an
unmatched contribution to the existing literature, comprehensive in
scope and authoritative in content. It deserves to become the
standard reference work on the subject.
*Ben Willis, Global Affairs*
The Oxford Handbook of the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) is a
substantial work of scholarship. The editors have gathered together
53 articles that cover most aspects of this nascent political
doctrine, across the spectrum from theory to practice. The
collection will be of significant interest to politicians,
diplomats, civil society actors and academics practising in the
spheres of international law and international relations. At more
than 1,000 pages, it is likely to become the initial comprehensive
reference for anyone interested in a serious study of the
prevention of mass atrocity crimes.
*Professor Spencer Zifcak, Reading Room: The Oxford Handbook of the
Responsibility to Protect*
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