- Fabian Klose, The emergence of humanitarian intervention: three centuries of 'enforcing humanity'
- Michael Geyer, Humanitarianism and human rights: a troubled rapport
- Daniel Marc Segesser, Humanitarian intervention and the issue of state sovereignty in the discourse of legal experts between the 1830s and the First World War
- Stefan Kroll, The legal justification of international intervention: theories of community and admissibility
- Fabian Klose, Enforcing abolition: the entanglement of civil society action, humanitarian norm-setting, and military intervention
- Mairi S. Macdonald, Lord Vivian's tears: the moral hazards of humanitarian intervention
- Abigail Green, From protection to humanitarian intervention? Enforcing Jewish rights in Romania and Morocco around 1880
- Jon Western, Prudence or outrage? Public opinion and humanitarian intervention in historical and comparative perspective
- Davide Rodogno, Non-state actors' humanitarian operations in the aftermath of the First World War: the case of the Near East relief
- Jost Dülffer, Humanitarian intervention as legitimation of violence – the German case 1937–9
- Norrie Macqueen, Cold War peacekeeping versus humanitarian intervention: beyond the Hammarskjoldian model
- Jan Erik Schulte, From the protection of sovereignty to humanitarian intervention? Traditions and developments of United Nations peacekeeping in the twentieth century
- Bradley Simpson, A not so humanitarian intervention
- Manuel Fröhlich, The responsibility to protect: foundation, transformation, and application of an emerging norm
- Andrew Thompson, Humanitarian interventions, past and present
Tuesday, January 19, 2016
Klose: The Emergence of Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas and Practice from the Nineteenth Century to the Present
Fabian Klose (Leibniz-Institut für Europäische Geschichte) has published The Emergence of Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas and Practice from the Nineteenth Century to the Present (Cambridge Univ. Press 2016). Contents include: