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The Origins and Evolution of the R2P Doctrine The Origins and Evolution of the R2P Doctrine
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The Practice of R2P The Practice of R2P
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Libya Libya
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Protection after Libya Protection after Libya
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Notes Notes
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References References
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36 The Politics of Global Humanitarianism: R2P before and after Libya
Get accessMichael W. Doyle is Harold Brown Professor at Columbia University in the School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia Law School, and the Department of Political Science. His publications include Ways of War and Peace (1997), Empires (1986), UN Peacekeeping in Cambodia (1995), and Making War and Building Peace (2006). He was Assistant Secretary‐General and Special Adviser to Kofi Annan and is the UN Secretary‐General's representative on the Advisory Board of the UN Democracy Fund.
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Published:03 August 2016
Cite
Abstract
The responsibility to protect (R2P) is both a license for and a leash against forcible intervention. It succeeded in widening the scope of legitimate armed intervention by licensing some (protective) interventions but only because it was seen as a leash against other (exploitative) interventions. This chapter traces the origins of the R2P doctrine in the Kosovo and ICISS reports, highlights the special features of the 2005 Outcome Document, notes how the doctrine was strengthened in practice by careful attention to non-coercive measures in Myanmar, Kenya, and Guinea, and then examines the landmark case of its use to sanction and then intervene against Gadhafi’s regime in Libya in 2011. The chapter concludes by drawing lessons for the revision and revival of this important contribution to human security.
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