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The responsibility to protect, imperialism and military intervention in libya

Samuel James Wyatt

pp. 177-198

This chapter contends that R2P has reduced the likelihood of human protection being used as a cover for the pursuit of imperialist and, more specifically, self-motivated inclinations germane to powerful states. It argues that R2P reflects a budding international legal principle endorsed and re-affirmed by a number of non-Western states that transcends and "dethrones' the lexicon of humanitarian intervention. Moreover, the practice of R2P has similarly lessened the prospect of human protection concerns being used as a cover for the pursuit of state-defined interests, with Operation Unified Protector in Libya representing a genuine application of R2P's principles and motivated by primarily humanitarian concerns. Subsequently, the doctrine has provided a framework through which the failure of cosmopolitan human protection in practice to weaken the prospect of intervention being used as a cover for the pursuit of objectives apposite to powerful states can begin to be addressed. In the process, R2P has helped to reinforce the sense of enthusiasm that already surrounds the evolution towards a more cosmopolitan approach to human protection in the post-Cold War period.

Publication details

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-00701-0_7

Full citation:

Wyatt, S. (2019). The responsibility to protect, imperialism and military intervention in libya, in The responsibility to protect and a cosmopolitan approach to human protection, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 177-198.

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