What can be done if the United Nations Security Council fails to protect people from mass atrocities? At a time of inaction and political paralysis at the United Nations, this book explains the legality of alternative action beyond the Security Council.
This book takes a fresh look at the responsibility to protect and offers new and compelling insights into the powers and limits of the UN Security Council. It argues that the Security Council's responsibility to maintain international peace and security, and its responsibility to protect, do not die with its own failures. Other actors can and must take up responsibility to save those in need. In a persuasive and detailed examination of the legal framework, this research identifies options for coercive measures to be taken beyond the Council that could be used to break the deadlock, including through the General Assembly and regional organisations.
Thursday, April 2, 2020
Butchard: The Responsibility to Protect and the Failures of the United Nations Security Council
P M Butchard (Edge Hill Univ. - Law) has published The Responsibility to Protect and the Failures of the United Nations Security Council (Hart Publishing 2020). Here's the abstract: