Notes
1 Arguably, R2P has a more storied genesis, beginning as Theresa Reinhold suggests with the work of Francis Deng on ‘responsible sovereignty’ and global academic and political efforts – also Canadian-led – on human security. Reinhold, in Hehir and Murray, Libya, 89.
2 United Nations, We the Peoples, 48.
3 ICISS, The Responsibility to Protect, 32.
4 United Nations, Implementing the Responsibility to Protect, 9.
5 ICISS, The Responsibility to Protect, 3.
6 See Evans, Responsibility to Protect.
7 See Bellamy, Responsibility to Protect and ‘Libya and the Responsibility to Protect’; Doyle, ‘Question of Intervention’; and Pattison, Humanitarian Intervention.
8 See Weiss, ‘The Sunset of Humanitarian Intervention?’ and Murray and Hehir, ‘Intervention in the Emerging Multipoloar System’.
9 Ian Williams, ‘Good Wars and Bad Anti-Wars?’, The World Post, 25 Sept. 2013, http://www.huffingtonpost.com/ian-williams/good-wars-and-bad-antiwar_b_3982091.html.
10 Moses, ‘Sovereignty as Irresponsibility?’, 132.
11 Murray and Hehir, ‘Intervention in the Emerging Multipolar System’, 399.
12 Hehir, The Responsibility to Protect.
13 Malone, Decision-Making in the Security Council.
14 Kuperman, ‘Suicidal Rebellions'.
15 Acharya, ‘How Ideas Spread’; Katzenstein, The Culture of National Security.
16 Gallie, ‘Essentially Contestable Concepts’.
17 Tan, ‘The Duty to Protect’; Bagnoli ‘Humanitarian Intervention’.
18 Evangelista, Law, Ethics, and the War on Terror; Brunnée and Toope, Legitimacy and Legality; Simpson, Great Powers and Outlaw States.
19 Bellamy, ‘Libya and the Responsibility to Protect’; Evans, Responsibility to Protect; Thakur, The People vs. the State.