ABSTRACT

International intervention on humanitarian grounds has been a contentious issue for decades. First, it pits the principle of state sovereignty against claims of universal human rights. Second, the motivations of intervening states may be open to question when avowals of moral action are arguably the fig leaf covering an assertion of power for political advantage. These questions have been salient in the context of the Balkan and African wars and U.S. policy in the Middle East. This volume undertakes a serious, systematic, and broadly international review of the issues.

chapter 1|17 pages

The Emerging World Order

State Sovereignty and Humanitarian Intervention

part I|59 pages

International Legal Foundations

part II|61 pages

The International Politics of Intervention

chapter 5|21 pages

Problematizing Sovereignty

Relative Sovereignty in the Historical Transformation of Interstate and State-Society Relations

chapter 6|19 pages

Weak States, State Making, and Humanitarian Intervention

With a View from the People’s Republic of China

chapter 7|19 pages

Humanitarian Intervention

The Interplay of Norms and Politics

part III|56 pages

The Philosophy of Intervention

part IV|74 pages

Regional Dialogues

chapter 11|21 pages

The New NATO

An Instrument for the Promotion of Democracy and Human Rights?

chapter 12|19 pages

NATO’s War Over Kosovo

The Debates, Dynamics, and Consequences

chapter 13|13 pages

The Reluctant Intervenor

The UN Security Council, China’s Worldview, and Humanitarian Intervention

part V|45 pages

Topics in Intervention

chapter 15|22 pages

Distributive Justice, Globalization, and International Intervention

The New Roles of Multilateral Institutions

chapter 16|21 pages

The Power of Responsible Peace

Engendering Reconstruction in Kosova