This book is a comprehensive presentation of humanitarian
intervention in theory and practice during the course of the
nineteenth century. Through four case studies, it sheds new light
on the international law debate and the political theory on
intervention, linking them to ongoing issues, and paying particular
attention to the lesser known Russian dimension.The book begins by
tracing the genealogy of the idea of humanitarian intervention to
the Renaissance, evaluating the Eurocentric gaze of the
civilisation-barbarity dichotomy, and elucidates the international
legal arguments of both advocates and opponents of intervention, as
well as the views of major political theorists. It then goes on to
examine four cases as humanitarian interventions: the Greek War of
Independence (1821-31), the Lebanon and Syria (1860-61), the
Bulgarian atrocities (1876-78), and the U.S. intervention in Cuba
(1895-98). -- .
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