International authority and the responsibility to protect

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Bibliographic Information

International authority and the responsibility to protect

Anne Orford

Cambridge University Press, 2011

  • : pbk
  • : hardback

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. 213-230) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The idea that states and the international community have a responsibility to protect populations at risk has framed internationalist debates about conflict prevention, humanitarian aid, peacekeeping and territorial administration since 2001. This book situates the responsibility to protect concept in a broad historical and jurisprudential context, demonstrating that the appeal to protection as the basis for de facto authority has emerged at times of civil war or revolution - the Protestant revolutions of early modern Europe, the bourgeois and communist revolutions of the following centuries and the revolution that is decolonisation. This analysis, from Hobbes to the UN, of the resulting attempts to ground authority on the capacity to guarantee security and protection is essential reading for all those seeking to understand, engage with, limit or critique the expansive practices of international executive action authorised by the responsibility to protect concept.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Protection in the shadow of empire
  • 2. Practices of protection: from the parliament of man to international executive rule
  • 3. How to recognise lawful authority: Hobbes, Schmitt and the responsibility to protect
  • 4. Who decides? Who interprets?: jurisdiction, recognition and the institutionalisation of protection
  • 5. The question of status and the subject of protection.

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