Beyond Responsibility to Protect: Generating Change in International Law

Beyond Responsibility to Protect: Generating Change in International Law
ISBN-10
1780682646
ISBN-13
9781780682648
Pages
504
Language
English
Published
2016-03-15
Authors
Richard Barnes, Vassilis P. Tzevelekos

Description

The history of international law is replete with concepts that have generated change: individual criminal responsibility, common heritage of mankind and sustainable development, to name but a few. These are concepts that have influenced the scope, structure and purpose of international law. This book explores the extent to which Responsibility to Protect (R2P) possesses the same transformative potential, showing how R2P shifts our understanding of both the potential and practice of international law. Responsibility to Protect is both an ambitious and an ambiguous concept in international law. Ambiguity creates space for debate and the potential for legal development, but it may also generate misunderstanding, false expectations and uncertainty. Despite its ambiguity, R2P has quickly found a place within international legal texts. At the same time its ambiguity - or rather the tensions the concept generates - has also helped generate an enormous range of scholarship. This collection of essays presents a critical evaluation of R2P, exploring how it interacts with existing concepts and values, and how this influences normative developments within international law. In particular, the essays explore the influence of R2P upon sovereignty as responsibility, the continued advance of positive human rights obligations, and the safeguarding of international community interests. (Series: International Law, Vol. 16) [Subject: ?International Law, Human Rights Law