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Ending War: A Dialogue across Disciplines examines how wars end
from a multidisciplinary perspective and includes enquiries into
the politics of war, the laws of war, and the military and
intellectual history of war. In recent years, the changes in the
character of contemporary warfare have created uncertainties across
different disciplines about how to identify and conceptualise the
end of war. A whole constellation of questions arises from such
uncertainties: How do philosophers define ethical responsibilities
in bello and post bellum if the boundary between war and peace is
ever so blurred? How do strategists define their objectives if the
teleology of action becomes uncertain? How do historians bracket
the known endings of war and delve into the arguments that preceded
them? Which answers can international law provide for the ending of
wars – and which challenges remain or have recently arisen? This
volume addresses these questions and enables both an understanding
of how ‘the end’ as a concept informs the understanding of war
in international relations, in international law, and in history,
as well as a reconsideration of the nature of scientific method in
the field of war studies as such. The chapters in this book were
originally published as a special issue of The Journal of Strategic
Studies.
Ending War: A Dialogue across Disciplines examines how wars end
from a multidisciplinary perspective and includes enquiries into
the politics of war, the laws of war, and the military and
intellectual history of war. In recent years, the changes in the
character of contemporary warfare have created uncertainties across
different disciplines about how to identify and conceptualise the
end of war. A whole constellation of questions arises from such
uncertainties: How do philosophers define ethical responsibilities
in bello and post bellum if the boundary between war and peace is
ever so blurred? How do strategists define their objectives if the
teleology of action becomes uncertain? How do historians bracket
the known endings of war and delve into the arguments that preceded
them? Which answers can international law provide for the ending of
wars - and which challenges remain or have recently arisen? This
volume addresses these questions and enables both an understanding
of how 'the end' as a concept informs the understanding of war in
international relations, in international law, and in history, as
well as a reconsideration of the nature of scientific method in the
field of war studies as such. The chapters in this book were
originally published as a special issue of The Journal of Strategic
Studies.
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.
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.
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