
Contents
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Sovereignty Sovereignty
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Changing World Politics and Emerging Challenges Changing World Politics and Emerging Challenges
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The Practice and Theory of ‘Humanitarian’ Intervention until the 1990s The Practice and Theory of ‘Humanitarian’ Intervention until the 1990s
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From ‘Humanitarian Intervention’ to ‘The Responsibility to Protect’ From ‘Humanitarian Intervention’ to ‘The Responsibility to Protect’
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‘Soft’ Intervention ‘Soft’ Intervention
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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22 Humanitarian Intervention
Get accessRamesh Thakur is Professor in the Crawford School of Public Policy, Australian National University and Editor-in-Chief of Global Governance. He was Senior Vice Rector of the UN University (and UN assistant secretary-general), a commissioner and a principal author of The Responsibility to Protect, principal writer of Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s second reform report, and Founding Director of the Balsillie School of International Affairs in Waterloo, Ontario. Educated in India and Canada, he has taught in Fiji, New Zealand, Australia, and Canada. He has written and edited over fifty books and 400 articles and book chapters.
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Published:02 September 2009
Cite
Abstract
This article looks at the use of military force to protect human beings, or humanitarian intervention. This is the extension of fourth-century arguments by St. Augustine and seventh-century arguments by Hugo Grotius. The article first examines humanitarian interventions by colonial powers during the nineteenth century. It also discusses the fastest-moving normative development of modern times, namely that the rights of human beings sometimes trump those of the states where they live.
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