Sovereignty and the Responsibility to Protect : A New History - Luke Glanville

Sovereignty and the Responsibility to Protect

A New History

By: Luke Glanville

Paperback | 20 December 2013 | Edition Number 1

At a Glance

Paperback


$93.80

or 4 interest-free payments of $23.45 with

 or 

Aims to ship in 15 to 25 business days

In 2011, the United Nations Security Council adopted Resolution 1973, authorizing its member states to take measures to protect Libyan civilians from Muammar Gadhafi’s forces. In invoking the “responsibility to protect,” the resolution draws on the principle that sovereign states are responsible and accountable to the international community for the protection of their populations and that the international community can act to protect populations when national authorities fail to do so. The idea that sovereignty includes the responsibility to protect is often seen as a departure from the classic definition, but it actually has deep historical roots.           
In Sovereignty and the Responsibility to Protect, Luke Glanville argues that this responsibility extends back to the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and that states have since been accountable for this responsibility to God, the people, and the international community. Over time, the right to national self-governance came to take priority over the protection of individual liberties, but the noninterventionist understanding of sovereignty was only firmly established in the twentieth century, and it remained for only a few decades before it was challenged by renewed claims that sovereigns are responsible for protection.           
Glanville traces the relationship between sovereignty and responsibility from the early modern period to the present day, and offers a new history with profound implications for the present.
Industry Reviews
"Luke Glanville provides a powerful corrective to the literature that sees sovereignty-and particularly the right of nonintervention-as a static norm in international politics, showing that there has always been an inherent tension between rights and responsibilities and that the 'traditional' meaning of sovereignty became predominant only at the end of World War II. Well-written and deeply rooted in the relevant literature, Sovereignty and the Responsibility to Protect makes a valuable contribution to scholarship in international relations." (Stacie Goddard, Wellesley College)"

More in Politics & Government

Murriyang : Song of Time - Stan Grant

RRP $39.99

$35.35

12%
OFF
Citizen : My Life After the White House - President Bill Clinton

RRP $65.00

$44.25

32%
OFF
Best Australian Political Cartoons 2024 - Russ Radcliffe
Unleashed - Boris Johnson

Paperback

RRP $49.99

$46.25

PATRIOT - Alexei Navalny

Hardcover

RRP $55.00

$39.90

27%
OFF
HAMAS : The Quest for Power - Beverley Milton-Edwards
A Promised Land : The Presidential Memoirs Vol. 1 - Barack Obama

RRP $65.00

$44.25

32%
OFF
The Gulag Archipelago : 1918-56 - Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn

RRP $37.99

$33.90

11%
OFF
Mein Kampf - Adolf Hitler

Paperback

RRP $59.99

$41.25

31%
OFF
Doppelganger : A Trip Into the Mirror World - Naomi Klein
Colonialism : A Moral Reckoning - Nigel Biggar

RRP $34.99

$31.75

The Forever War - Nick Bryant

RRP $36.99

$33.25

10%
OFF
Caste : The International Bestseller - Isabel Wilkerson

RRP $26.99

$25.75

The Message - Ta-Nehisi Coates

Paperback

RRP $36.99

$33.25

10%
OFF