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The idea for this project on humanitarian intervention emerged during a conversation in an Oxford pub with two of my colleagues, David Williams and Neil MacFarlane. I am grateful to both of them for helping me to see that the most interesting issues surrounding humanitarian intervention are not questions of ‘right’, but rather the agonizing moral and political trade-offs that states make in contemporary world politics.
Neil MacFarlane also supported me as co-chair in the seminar series from which these chapters draw. True to form, his comments and questions in the chair were sceptical and penetrating, and helped to put the process of paper revision on the right track. I would also like to thank all those who acted as discussants for the papers in their earlier renditions: Andrew Hurrell, Richard Crampton, Sir Marrack Goulding, Timothy Garton Ash, Peter Carey, Richard Caplan, Jane Boulden, and Michael Byers.
The Centre for International Studies and the Cyril Foster Fund generously supported both the seminar series and edited book. Mark Philp, Department Head for Politics and International Relations, encouraged my research and facilitated some much-needed sabbatical leave.
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