Beyond the Responsibility to Protect in International Law An Ethics of Irresponsibility.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Milton :
Taylor & Francis Group,
2020.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Intro
- Half Title
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acronyms
- Introduction
- Approach and methodology
- Chapter outline
- Chapter 1: From humanitarian intervention to R2P
- Introductory remarks
- Dual promise: rights of states and rights of individuals at the end of WWII
- The UN Charter, the use of force, and the 'right of humanitarian intervention'
- Legal debates on the use of force in the midst of the Cold War
- Blurring the line: peacekeeping, peace-enforcement or humanitarian intervention?
- The 1990s, the collective security system, and the use of force for protection
- The 'spring' of liberal/legal internationalism
- Kosovo
- The legal debate on Kosovo
- The institutionalization of R2P
- From dual promise to dual responsibility
- To prevent
- To react
- To rebuild
- Subsequent developments
- Concluding remarks
- Chapter 2: Just war, R2P, and punishment
- Introductory remarks
- De-moralization/re-moralization and the absence of the concept of punishment
- Just war and R2P reinventing Just War
- Punishing wrongdoing: the ambiguous origins of humanitarianism
- 'Classic' vs. 'contemporary' approaches to Just War
- Walzer's ethics and R2P
- Cultural hegemony and liberal international law: structural punishment as critique
- Concluding remarks
- Chapter 3: The irresponsibility of R2P
- Introductory remarks
- A notion of 'irresponsibility'?
- Agential materiality and the 'international community': ruling the 'void' and mastering uncertainty
- Sites of 'irresponsibility' within R2P
- The division of labour and the significance of role responsibility
- The meaning and effect of processes of individualization within R2P
- 'Transference of responsibilities'
- The 'unreal' normative pathologies of R2P
- R2P and international criminal justice
- Concluding remarks
- Chapter 4: R2P as a foreclosing structure of address
- Introductory remarks
- The 'terrifying secret' of responsibility and the 'economy of sacrifice'
- Cosmopolitanism and its critics
- The limits of cosmopolitan promise
- From anxiety to control: disciplinary affinities and legal rationality
- The 'critical' response in IR
- 'Scenes of Address': 'performative', mediated and uncertain subjects
- R2P as a foreclosing structure/mode of address
- The responsibility to punish?
- Recognizing failure, irresponsibility and vulnerability: in being-with
- 'Terrorism' and misrecognition
- Where and when failure lies
- Concluding remarks
- Conclusion
- Rethinking the 'theorizing of responsibility' for large scale loss of life in international law
- International authority (universal jurisdiction) and punishment through protection
- Internal irresponsibility and violence
- Response-ability and critique
- Bibliography
- General Assembly resolutions, reports and documents of the United Nations (in alphabetical order)