ABSTRACT

This volume is a collection of some of the key essays by Ramesh Thakur on the origins, implementation and future prospects of the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) norm.

The book offers a comprehensive yet accessible review of the origins, evolution, advances and shortcomings of the R2P principle. A literature review is followed by an overview of the background, meaning and development of R2P. With a focus on the International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty (ICISS), Part I analyses the features of, and explains the factors that make for success and failure of commission diplomacy. Part II discusses the controversies surrounding efforts to implement R2P, including the role and importance of emerging powers. Part III describes the remaining protection gaps and explains why R2P will remain relevant because it is essentially demand driven. Finally, the book concludes with a look back at the origins of R2P and looks ahead to possible future directions.

This book will be essential for students of the Responsibility to Protect, and of much interest to students of global governance, human rights, international law and international relations.

chapter 1|7 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|23 pages

The Responsibility to Protect at 15 *

part I|9 pages

Origins, meaning and evolution

chapter 3|20 pages

High-level panels *

chapter 5|17 pages

From the right to persecute to the Responsibility to Protect

Feuerbachian inversions of rights and responsibilities in state-citizen relations *

chapter 6|25 pages

From humanitarian intervention to R2P

Cosmetic or consequential? *

part II|8 pages

Implementation controversies

chapter 7|14 pages

R2P after Libya and Syria

Engaging emerging powers *

chapter 8|14 pages

R2P’s ‘structural’ problems

A response to Roland Paris *

part III|9 pages

Gaps in and demands for atrocity prevention

chapter 11|15 pages

Atrocity crimes and global governance *

chapter 12|16 pages

Retrospect and prospect