New Books in World Affairs

Luke Glanville, "Sharing Responsibility: The History and Future of Protection from Atrocities" (Princeton UP, 2021)

Dec 21, 2021
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Episode notes
1
Introduction
00:00 • 2min
2
Humanitarian Intervention - A History of Sovereignty
01:31 • 3min
3
The Role of State in International Humanitarian Action
04:27 • 5min
4
Is There a Difference Between a Musician and a Demic?
09:21 • 2min
5
The Westphalian Story and Its Falseness
11:23 • 4min
6
Are There Those Motives That Motivate States to Act?
15:33 • 4min
7
Is Intervention Always Imperialistic, or Is It Always Well Intentioned?
19:44 • 4min
8
Is the Security Council Responsible for the Use of Force for Human Protection?
23:50 • 6min
9
What Went Wrong in Libya Wasn't So Much the Intervention Itself as the Failure of the in Vening Powers
29:27 • 5min
10
Is the Responsibility to Protect an Imperative Duty?
34:34 • 6min
11
Is a Culpable State the Worst State to Intervene in a Crisis?
40:25 • 2min
12
Are There Any Situations of Need Human Protection?
42:15 • 3min
13
Is There a Usefulness of the Charge of Selectivity?
44:47 • 3min
14
Human Protection Beyond Borders - How Can They Be Overcome?
47:38 • 5min
15
The Role of State Responsibility in Preventing Genicide
52:56 • 3min
16
Is the International Criminal Court a Good Place to Start?
55:41 • 4min
17
Is There a State Responsibility for International Crimes?
59:56 • 4min