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by Cathinka Vik
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This book explores the moral complexity of statecraft in the context of decision-making on armed intervention in the post-Cold War era. This book adds to the debate on humanitarian intervention by analyzing the moral complexity of statecraft when confronted with situations of severe human rights violations. Through a comparative case study of President Bill Clinton administration's failure to intervene in the Rwanda genocide (1994), the George W. Bush administration's tepid response to the Darfur atrocities (2003-07), and the Barack Obama administration's leadership behind the limited U.N. intervention in Libya (2011), it explores the factors - domestic and international - that influence decision-making about humanitarian intervention. These cases show, not only how international moral concerns often compete with interest-based and domestic concerns, but how decision-makers are often confronted by competing moral imperatives. In such situations, it is often not clear which imperatives should be followed. In an increasingly interconnected world, this book examines how we expect state leaders to balance different moral responsibilities.
This book will be of much interest to students of humanitarian intervention, the Responsibility to Protect, human rights, US foreign policy, African politics and IR in general.
Title
Moral Responsibility, Statecraft and Humanitarian Intervention
Author
Cathinka Vik
Book Format
Hardback
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published
May 2015
Weight
318g
Page Count
166
Dimensions
14 x 21.6 x 1.2 cm
ISBN
9781138887992
ISBN-10
1138887994
Eden Code
4593072
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£177.81
Free UK Delivery
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Available - Usually dispatched within 4 days
