The theories and case studies examined in this volume constitute
a thorough study of foreign intervention in civil conflicts for the
purpose of rendering humanitarian aid. The classical paradigm of
the ethics of intervention forbids the violation of territorial
sovereignty. Public international law and the UN charter also
mandate nonintervention within the territorial boundaries of a
state. Nevertheless, in recent years, as a result of brutal civil
conflicts and their violent and inhumane consequences--as in
Rwanda, Bosnia, and Cambodia--international aid interventions have
become an accepted practice. Still, international humanitarian aid
involves unsettled, controversial issues--dilemmas concerning
donors, recipients, and international organizations. These issues,
as well as the concepts of sovereignty, human rights, coercive
interventions, and peacekeeping, are critically evaluated in this
volume, which will be of interest to scholars and policymakers in
international relations, human rights, and military affairs.
General
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