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Indigo

Saving Strangers by Nicholas J. Wheeler, Paperback | Indigo Chapters

From Nicholas J. Wheeler

Current price: $48.50
Saving Strangers by Nicholas J. Wheeler, Paperback | Indigo Chapters
Saving Strangers by Nicholas J. Wheeler, Paperback | Indigo Chapters

Indigo

Saving Strangers by Nicholas J. Wheeler, Paperback | Indigo Chapters

From Nicholas J. Wheeler

Current price: $48.50
Loading Inventory...

Size: 19.3 x 234 x 500

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The extent to which humanitarian intervention has become a legitimate practice in post-cold war international society is the subject of this book. It maps the changing legitimacy of humanitarian intervention by comparing the international response to cases of humanitarian intervention in thecold war and post-cold war periods. Crucially, the book examines how far international society has recognised humanitarian intervention as a legitimate exception to the rules of sovereignty and non-intervention and non-use of force. While there are studies of each case of intervention-in EastPakistan, Cambodia, Uganda, Iraq, Somalia, Rwanda, Bosnia and Kosovo-there is no single work that examines them comprehensively in a comparative framework. Each chapter tells a story of intervention that weaves together a study of motives, justifications and outcomes. The legitimacy ofhumanitarian intervention is contested by the 'pluralist' and 'solidarist' wings of the English school, and the book charts the stamp of these conceptions on state practice. Solidarism lacks a full-blown theory of humanitarian intervention and the book supplies one. This theory is employed toassess the humanitarian qualifications of the cases of intervention analysed in the book, and this normative assessment is then compared to the moral practices of states. A key focus is to examine how far humanitarian intervention as a legitimate practice is present in the diplomatic dialogue ofstates. In exploring how far there has been a change of norm in the society of states in the 1990s, the book defends the broad based constructivist claim that state actions will be constrained if they cannot be legitimated, and that new norms enable new practices but do not determine these. Thebook concludes by considering how far contemporary practices of humanitarian intervention support a new solidarism, and how far this resolves the traditional conflict between order and justice in international society. | Saving Strangers by Nicholas J. Wheeler, Paperback | Indigo Chapters
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