
Global Justice, Kant and the Responsibility to Protect
A Provisional Duty
- 206 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Global Justice, Kant and the Responsibility to Protect
A Provisional Duty
About this book
This book provides an innovative contribution to the study of the Responsibility to Protect and Kantian political theory.
The Responsibility to Protect (R2P) doctrine has been heralded as the new international security norm to ensure the protection of peoples against genocide, ethnic cleansing, war crimes and crimes against humanity. Yet, for all of the discussion, endorsements and reaffirmations of this new norm, R2P continues to come under fire for its failures, particularly, and most recently, in the case of Syria.
This book argues that a duty to protect is best considered a Kantian provisional duty of justice. The international system ought to be considered a state of nature, where legal institutions are either weak or absent, and so duties of justice in such a condition cannot be considered peremptory. This book suggests that by understanding the duty's provisional status, we understand the necessity of creating the requisite executive, legislative and judicial authorities. Furthermore, the book provides three innovative contributions to the literature, study and practice of R2P and Kantian political theory: it provides detailed theoretical analysis of R2P; it addresses the research gap that exists with Kant's account of justice in states of nature; and it presents a more comprehensive understanding of the metaphysics of justice as well as R2P.
This book will be of much interest to students of the Responsibility to Protect, humanitarian intervention, global ethics, international law, security studies and international relations (IR) in general.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover Page
- Half Title page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Foreword: problems and possibilities in institutionalizing the Responsibility to Protect
- Acknowledgments
- List of abbreviations
- Introduction Kant, global justice and Responsibility to Protect
- 1 Kantian provisional duties
- 2 Provisional protection The Responsibility to Protect as a provisional duty
- 3 Kant's permissive laws
- 4 Permissible coercion
- 5 Provisional to peremptory Institutionalizing a duty to protect
- 6 Conclusion The Responsibility to Protect and the real world—Libya and Syria
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index