This book examines core thematic approaches to the Responsibility to Protect (R2P) and analyzes case studies regarding the implementation of this important global norm.
The volume analyzes this process at international, regional and local levels, and identifies an urgent need to progress from conceptual debates towards implementation in practice, in order to understand how to operationalize the preventive dimension of the R2P. It argues that R2P implementation necessarily entails the efforts of actors across governance levels, and that it is more effective when integrated into existing sites of practice aimed at strengthening human rights and accountability for populations in atrocity risk situations. The book addresses R2P implementation in the context of agendas such as resilience, gender, development cooperation, human rights, transitional justice, peacekeeping and civil-military relations. It details progress and challenges for implementation in the United Nations, regionally in Africa, Europe and Southeast Asia, and through national atrocity prevention architectures. The volume provides readers with a breadth of understanding in terms of both the development and current status of the R2P norm, and practical tools for advancing its implementation.
This book will be of much interest to students of the Responsibility to Protect, Human Rights, Peace Studies, and International Relations in general.
Author(s): Cecilia Jacob and Martin Mennecke
Series: Global Politics and the Responsibility to Protect
Publisher: Routledge
Year: 2019
Cover
Half Title
Series
Title
Copyright
Contents
List of tables
Preface
Notes on contributors
List of abbreviations
Foreword
Introduction: the challenges of implementing the R2P norm
1 R2P as an atrocity-prevention framework: concepts and institutionalization at the global level
Part I National implementation mechanisms
2 Denmark and the implementation of R2P
3 Atrocity prevention under the Obama administration
Part II Regional implementation mechanisms
4 ASEAN regionalism and capacity-building for atrocities prevention: challenges and prospects
5 African experiences of R2P implementation
6 Europe’s engagement with R2P in a transitional international order
Part III Atrocity prevention
7 Atrocity prevention, national resilience, and implementation
8 Atrocity prevention in practice: studying the role of Southeast Asian women in atrocity prevention
Part IV International legal accountability
9 Linking human rights accountability and compliance with R2P implementation
10 Linking the past and the present: the contribution of transitional justice to security after complex conflicts
Part V Peacekeeping, civil–military assistance, and stabilization
11 Implementing R2P through United Nations peacekeeping operations: opportunities and challenges
12 Civil–military relations and R2P: the Afghan experience
Conclusion: R2P at a crossroads: implementation or marginalization
Index