ABSTRACT

This conclusion presents some closing thoughts on the key concepts discussed in the preceding chapters of this book. The book focuses on human rights law and practice, and their roles in creating the outcomes of humanitarian intervention. It analysis with complex and faceted view of law as violence, bureaucracy, and governance. The multi-dimensional nature of law as bureaucracy, governance, and violence is fundamental to its work on projects of human rights and the rule of law in humanitarian intervention. Bureaucratic law cooperates with practices of governance when the human rights experts of intergovernmental organization (IGO) missions and other actors in the field focuses on educating and governing the local population as the nation is rebuilt. It also investigates the networks of legal texts and international experts, the triangles of law expand as prisms and soon begin to multiply, overlap, displace, and refract one another in the complexities of power relations in humanitarian intervention and human rights fieldwork.