The Responsibility to Protect: Ending Mass Atrocity Crimes Once and for All

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After the Holocaust, the world vowed it would never again stand by and permit such heinous crimes against humanity. Yet many subsequent atrocities have gone unchecked, all over the world: from the killing fields of Cambodia, to Rwanda, and to Srebrenica. The bloody list continues to grow, led by the unfolding nightmare in Darfur. How and why were the world's best intentions derailed, and what can be done today to put these efforts back on track? The "responsibility to protect: - R2P for short - was unanimously embraced at the UN World Summit in 2005. The heart of this new international norm is the belief that if sovereign governments fail to protect their own people from mass atrocity crimes, then responsibility shifts to the wider international community to take whatever action is appropriate, including (in extreme cases) the use of force. The world cannot, and will not, just stand by. Evens spells out the steps needed to make R2P work in practice and clarifies the misunderstandings, real or contrived, which persist about its scope and limits. He emphasizes the need for preventive action, and for preferring assistance and persuasion to coercion, but he also makes clear when it is right to fight. The book is enlivened throughout by real world examples, analyses of current events, and assessments drawn from the author's own vast experience.

Author(s): Gareth Evans
Publisher: Brookings Institution Press
Year: 2008

Language: English
Pages: 368

Table of Contents......Page 10
Acknowledgments......Page 14
Introduction......Page 20
The Problem: The Recurring Nightmare of Mass Atrocities......Page 30
The Solution: From "The Right to Intervene" to "The Responsibility to Protect"......Page 50
The Scope and Limits of the Responsibility to Protect......Page 74
Before the Crisis: The Responsibility to Prevent......Page 98
Duruing the Crisis: The Responsibility to React......Page 124
Reacting to Crises: When is Right to Fight?......Page 147
After the Crisis: The Responsibility to Rebuild......Page 167
Institutional Preparedness: The Actors......Page 194
Building Diplomatic, Civilian and Military Capability......Page 219
Mobilizing Political Will......Page 242
Appendix A......Page 262
Appendix B......Page 271
Appendix C......Page 273
Appendix D......Page 278
Notes......Page 286
Index......Page 348