The emergence of humanitarian intervention : ideas and practice from the nineteenth century to the present /

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Bibliographic Details
Imprint:Cambridge, United Kingdom : Cambridge University Press, [2016]
Description:1 online resource (ix, 364 pages) : illustrations
Language:English
Series:Human rights in history
Human rights in history.
Subject:
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12645839
Hidden Bibliographic Details
Other authors / contributors:Klose, Fabian, editor.
ISBN:9781316439340
1316439348
9781139871815
1139871811
9781316436509
1316436500
9781107075511
1107075513
9781107428317
1316434370
9781316434376
1316435083
9781316435083
1316435792
9781316435793
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Print version record.
Summary:"How should the international community react when a government transgresses humanitarian norms and violates the human rights of its own nationals? And where does the responsibility lie to protect people from such acts of violation? In a profound new study, Fabian Klose unites a team of leading scholars to investigate some of the most complex and controversial debates regarding the legitimacy of protecting humanitarian norms and universal human rights by non-violent and violent means. Charting the development of humanitarian intervention from its origins in the nineteenth century through to the present day, the book surveys the philosophical and legal rationales of enforcing humanitarian norms by military means, and how attitudes to military intervention on humanitarian grounds have changed over the course of three centuries. Drawing from a wide range of disciplines, the authors lend a fresh perspective to contemporary dilemmas using case studies from Europe, the United States, Africa and Asia."--Publisher's website.
Other form:Print version: Emergence of humanitarian intervention 9781107075511
Standard no.:10.1017/CBO9781139871815
40025602118
Table of Contents:
  • The emergence of humanitarian intervention: three centuries of "enforcing humanity" / Fabian Klose
  • Part I. Theoretical Approach and Legal Discourse on the Concept of Humanitarian Intervention
  • Humanitarianism and human rights: a troubled rapport / Michael Geyer
  • Humanitarian intervention and the issue of state sovereignty in the discourse of legal experts between the 1830s and the First World War / Daniel Marc Segesser
  • The legal justification of international intervention: theories of community and admissibility / Stefan Kroll
  • Part II. Fighting the Slave Trade and Protecting Religious Minorities: Major Impulses for Humanitarian Intervention in the Nineteenth Century
  • Enforcing abolition: the entanglement of civil society action, humanitarian norm-setting, and military intervention / Fabian Klose
  • Lord Vivian's tears: the moral hazards of humanitarian intervention / Mairi S. MacDonald
  • From protection to humanitarian intervention? Enforcing Jewish rights in Romania and Morocco around 1880 / Abigail Green
  • Part III. Transferring a Concept to the Twentieth Century
  • Prudence or outrage? Public opinion and humanitarian intervention in historical and comparative perspective / Jon Western
  • Non-state actors' humanitarian operations in the aftermath of the First World War: the case of the Near East relief / Davide Rodogno
  • Humanitarian intervention as legitimation of violence: the German case 1937-9 / Jost Dülffer
  • Part IV. Limited Options or Further Development? Humanitarian Intervention during the Cold War
  • Cold War peacekeeping versus humanitarian intervention: beyond the Hammarskjoldian model / Norrie MacQueen
  • From the protection of sovereignty to humanitarian intervention? Traditions and developments of United Nations peacekeeping in the twentieth century /Jan Erik Schulte
  • Part V.A New Century of Humanitarian Intervention?
  • A not so humanitarian intervention / Bradley Simpson
  • The responsibility to protect: foundation, transformation, and application of an emerging norm / Manuel Fröhlich
  • Humanitarian interventions, past and present / Andrew Thompson.