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E-grāmata: Sovereignty and the Responsibility to Protect: The Power of Norms and the Norms of the Powerful

(Wissenschaftszentrum, Berlin, Germany)
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This book explores how the bedrock institution of today’s global order – sovereignty – is undergoing transformation as a result of complex interactions between power and norms, between politics and international law.

This book analyses a series of controversial military interventions into the internal affairs of "irresponsible sovereigns" and discusses their consequences for the rules on the use of force and the principle of sovereign equality. Featuring case studies on Kosovo, Darfur and Afghanistan, It shows that frames from one discourse (for example the debate over the responsibility to protect) have been imported into other discourses (on counter-terrorism and nuclear non-proliferation) in an attempt to legitimize a bold challenge to the global legal order. Although the ‘demise’ of sovereignty is widely debated, this book instead seeks to ‘deconstruct’ sovereignty by explaining how this institution has been reconstituted by global powers whose hegemonic law-making activities have popularized the notion of sovereignty as responsibility.

Drawing on international relations theory, international law and sociology, Sovereignty and the Responsibility to Protect develops a truly interdisciplinary perspective on the transformation of sovereignty and will be of strong interest to students and scholars in these fields.

Acknowledgments xiii
List of abbreviations
xiv
1 Introduction
1(9)
2 Setting the theoretical context
10(44)
2.1 Two disciplines -- one world
10(8)
2.2 Understanding institutional transformation: constructivism and the formation of customary international law
18(7)
2.3 Toward a synthetic approach: the concept of hegemonic law-making
25(25)
2.4 Summary and methodology: critical variables, hypotheses, and case selection
50(4)
3 The responsibility to protect
54(36)
3.1 The responsibility to protect
54(12)
3.2 Darfur
66(19)
3.3 Hypothesis testing and conclusion
85(5)
4 The obligation to control
90(29)
4.1 State failure and self-defense against armed attacks by non-state actors: the law as it stood prior to 9/11
90(4)
4.2 The US response to state-sponsored terrorism prior to 9/11
94(3)
4.3 9/11 and the war against Afghanistan
97(17)
4.4 Hypothesis testing and conclusion
114(5)
5 The duty to prevent
119(32)
5.1 Origins of the rogue state concept in US foreign policy
119(16)
5.2 Iraq
135(11)
5.3 Hypothesis testing and conclusion
146(5)
6 Conclusion: sovereignty as responsibility?
151(6)
Appendix 157(1)
Notes 158(9)
Bibliography 167(22)
Index 189
Theresa Reinold is a Postdoctoral research fellow at the Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin, Germany. Her research focuses on Constitutionalization/fragmentation of international law, African regionalism, Terrorism/state failure and Human rights.