Protecting Human Rights in the 21st Century
Herausgeber: Hehir, Aidan; Murray, Robert W
Protecting Human Rights in the 21st Century
Herausgeber: Hehir, Aidan; Murray, Robert W
- Broschiertes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This book provides a comprehensive overview of the trajectory of international human-rights protection in the 21st century.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- Alert 2012!: Report on Conflicts, Human Rights and Peacebuilding44,99 €
- Contemporary Debates on Terrorism60,99 €
- Jw SmithWHY? The Deeper History Behind the September 11th Terrorist Attack on America -- 3rd Edition pbk31,99 €
- Matt SchumannThe Seven Years War77,99 €
- Alastair FinlanContemporary Military Culture and Strategic Studies65,99 €
- MagruderCounterinsurgency, Security Forces, and the Identification Problem61,99 €
- Military Advising and Assistance76,99 €
-
-
-
This book provides a comprehensive overview of the trajectory of international human-rights protection in the 21st century.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 264
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. April 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 233mm x 151mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 429g
- ISBN-13: 9781138218932
- ISBN-10: 1138218936
- Artikelnr.: 47425866
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 264
- Erscheinungstermin: 11. April 2017
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 233mm x 151mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 429g
- ISBN-13: 9781138218932
- ISBN-10: 1138218936
- Artikelnr.: 47425866
Aidan Hehir is Reader in International Relations at the University of Westminster, UK. He is the author/editor of numerous titles, including Humanitarian Intervention: An Introduction (2nd edn, 2013) and The Responsibility to Protect: Rhetoric, Reality and the Future of Humanitarian Intervention (2012). Robert W. Murray is Managing Director at Dentons Canada LLP's Government Affairs and Public Policy Practice Group and Research Fellow at the Centre for Military, Security and Strategic Studies, University of Calgary, Canada. He is the author/editor of numerous titles, including Multilateralism as State Strategy (2016) and International Relations and the Arctic (2014).
Introduction: Denial, Fatalism and the Protection of Human Rights, Aidan
Hehir
Part I: Rethinking Fundamental Principles
1. Global Constituent Power: Protests and Human Rights, Anthony F Lang, Jr
2. A Critical Examination of "Humanity", Samuel Jarvis
3. Failed Interventions and the Inherent Contradictions of Liberal
Internationalism, Eric A. Heinze
4. Humanitarian Intervention in Post-American International Society,
Robert W. Murray
Part II: "Protection" and Peacekeeping
5. The Uncertainties of International Protection, Kelly Staples
6. UN Peacekeeping and the Protection of Civilians Norm, Tom Keating
7. From Showpiece Interventions to Day-to-Day Civilian Protection: Western
Humanitarian Intervention and UN Peacekeeping, Jonathan Gilmore and David
Curran
8. The Responsibility to Protect or the Protection of Civilians: Which
Policy Brand is more "Successful"?, Catherine Jones
Part III: The Responsibility to Protect and Beyond
9. Norm Complexity and Contestation: Unpacking the R2P, Alan Bloomfield
10. "Why is it that we keep failing?" The Responsibility to Protect as a
Hollow Norm, Aidan Hehir
11. Guns Vs Troops: The Ethics of Supplying Arms, James Pattison
12. The Limits of R2P and the Case for Pacifism, Jeremy Moses
13. The Responsibility to Protect: A Long View, Justin Morris
Conclusion: The Future of Human Rights Protection, Robert W. Murray
Hehir
Part I: Rethinking Fundamental Principles
1. Global Constituent Power: Protests and Human Rights, Anthony F Lang, Jr
2. A Critical Examination of "Humanity", Samuel Jarvis
3. Failed Interventions and the Inherent Contradictions of Liberal
Internationalism, Eric A. Heinze
4. Humanitarian Intervention in Post-American International Society,
Robert W. Murray
Part II: "Protection" and Peacekeeping
5. The Uncertainties of International Protection, Kelly Staples
6. UN Peacekeeping and the Protection of Civilians Norm, Tom Keating
7. From Showpiece Interventions to Day-to-Day Civilian Protection: Western
Humanitarian Intervention and UN Peacekeeping, Jonathan Gilmore and David
Curran
8. The Responsibility to Protect or the Protection of Civilians: Which
Policy Brand is more "Successful"?, Catherine Jones
Part III: The Responsibility to Protect and Beyond
9. Norm Complexity and Contestation: Unpacking the R2P, Alan Bloomfield
10. "Why is it that we keep failing?" The Responsibility to Protect as a
Hollow Norm, Aidan Hehir
11. Guns Vs Troops: The Ethics of Supplying Arms, James Pattison
12. The Limits of R2P and the Case for Pacifism, Jeremy Moses
13. The Responsibility to Protect: A Long View, Justin Morris
Conclusion: The Future of Human Rights Protection, Robert W. Murray
Introduction: Denial, Fatalism and the Protection of Human Rights, Aidan
Hehir
Part I: Rethinking Fundamental Principles
1. Global Constituent Power: Protests and Human Rights, Anthony F Lang, Jr
2. A Critical Examination of "Humanity", Samuel Jarvis
3. Failed Interventions and the Inherent Contradictions of Liberal
Internationalism, Eric A. Heinze
4. Humanitarian Intervention in Post-American International Society,
Robert W. Murray
Part II: "Protection" and Peacekeeping
5. The Uncertainties of International Protection, Kelly Staples
6. UN Peacekeeping and the Protection of Civilians Norm, Tom Keating
7. From Showpiece Interventions to Day-to-Day Civilian Protection: Western
Humanitarian Intervention and UN Peacekeeping, Jonathan Gilmore and David
Curran
8. The Responsibility to Protect or the Protection of Civilians: Which
Policy Brand is more "Successful"?, Catherine Jones
Part III: The Responsibility to Protect and Beyond
9. Norm Complexity and Contestation: Unpacking the R2P, Alan Bloomfield
10. "Why is it that we keep failing?" The Responsibility to Protect as a
Hollow Norm, Aidan Hehir
11. Guns Vs Troops: The Ethics of Supplying Arms, James Pattison
12. The Limits of R2P and the Case for Pacifism, Jeremy Moses
13. The Responsibility to Protect: A Long View, Justin Morris
Conclusion: The Future of Human Rights Protection, Robert W. Murray
Hehir
Part I: Rethinking Fundamental Principles
1. Global Constituent Power: Protests and Human Rights, Anthony F Lang, Jr
2. A Critical Examination of "Humanity", Samuel Jarvis
3. Failed Interventions and the Inherent Contradictions of Liberal
Internationalism, Eric A. Heinze
4. Humanitarian Intervention in Post-American International Society,
Robert W. Murray
Part II: "Protection" and Peacekeeping
5. The Uncertainties of International Protection, Kelly Staples
6. UN Peacekeeping and the Protection of Civilians Norm, Tom Keating
7. From Showpiece Interventions to Day-to-Day Civilian Protection: Western
Humanitarian Intervention and UN Peacekeeping, Jonathan Gilmore and David
Curran
8. The Responsibility to Protect or the Protection of Civilians: Which
Policy Brand is more "Successful"?, Catherine Jones
Part III: The Responsibility to Protect and Beyond
9. Norm Complexity and Contestation: Unpacking the R2P, Alan Bloomfield
10. "Why is it that we keep failing?" The Responsibility to Protect as a
Hollow Norm, Aidan Hehir
11. Guns Vs Troops: The Ethics of Supplying Arms, James Pattison
12. The Limits of R2P and the Case for Pacifism, Jeremy Moses
13. The Responsibility to Protect: A Long View, Justin Morris
Conclusion: The Future of Human Rights Protection, Robert W. Murray