ABSTRACT

This book will consider a rapidly emerging guiding general principle in international relations and, arguably, in international law: the Responsibility to Protect. This principle is a solution proposed to a key preoccupation in both international relations and international law scholarship: how the international community is to respond to mass atrocities within sovereign States. There are three facets to this responsibility; the responsibility to prevent; the responsibility to react, and the responsibility to rebuild.

This doctrine will be analysed in light of the parallel development of customary and treaty international legal obligations imposing responsibilities on sovereign states to the international community in key international law fields such as international human rights law, international criminal law and international environmental law. These new developments demand academic study and this book fills this lacuna by rigorously considering all of these developments as part of a trend towards assumption of international responsibility. This must include the responsibility on the part of all states to respond to threats of genocide, crimes against humanity, ethnic cleansings and large-scale war crimes. The discussion surrounding aggravated state responsibility is also explored, with the author concluding that this emerging norm within international law is closely related to the responsibility to protect in its imposition of an international responsibility to act in response to an international wrong.

This book will be of great interest to scholars on international law, the law of armed conflict, security studies and IR in general.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part |49 pages

The theoretical roots of the responsibility to protect

part |121 pages

The evolution of the responsibility to protect within areas of public international law

chapter |31 pages

State responsibility

Obligations on states in international law

chapter |30 pages

International human rights law

Rights and responsibilities

chapter |26 pages

International criminal law

Responsibilities within the international criminal justice system

chapter |33 pages

International environmental law

The responsibility to save the planet

part |2 pages

The responsibility to protect in practice

chapter |26 pages

The responsibility to react

chapter |21 pages

Responsibilities ignored?

Syria and Iraq

chapter |5 pages

Conclusion