THE THEORY AND POLICY OF THE LIBERAL INTERNATIONALISM IN THE 90S AND THE CONCEPT OF HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTION
Keywords:
liberal internationalism, human rights, sovereignty, humanitarian intervention, intra-state conflicts, moraleAbstract
Liberal internationalism is based on global risk manifests itself as violence against individuals on the border of peace and war in intra-state conflicts, as per this understanding presents a challenge to global governance. International stability is seen not only through through the level of cooperation in relations between the two countries, but also over the level of safety and quality of consuming human rights by individuals. From these interactions between the concepts of sovereignty and the rights it could be concluded that the concept of sovereignty is developing and changing under the influence of factors, such as human rights. Humanitarian intervention as a coercive action performed by states- hegemons in international politics, in order to prevent or halt large and massive violations of human rights in the failed / collapsing states should have the right foundation into the humanitarian reason. It is very difficult to find a moral justification for humanitarian intervention, despite the fact that it may have contingent moral effects. Attempt of moralization of humanitarian intervention lies in the pragmatic politics of national interest.
Downloads
References
Chandler, David (2012) Resilience and Human Security: The post-interventionist Paradigm, Security Dialoque 43 (3), str.213-229
Chandler, David (2015) Rethinking the Conflict- Powerthy Nexusus: From Securitising Intervention to Resilience, Stability, International Journal of Security&Development 4(1), 13. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5334/sta.fb , str. 1–14
Coady, C.A.J.Tony (2002) The Ethics of Armed Humanitarian Intervention, Peaceworks No. 45, United States Institute of Peace (Washinton, D.C.) , str.5-41
Dunne,Tim, McDonald Matt (2011) The politics of libaral internationalism, School of Political Science and International Studies, University of Queensland
Holzgrefe, J.L. (2003) The Humanitarian interevention debate, in Humanitarian Intervention: Ethical, Legal and Political Dilemmas, edited by J.L.Holzgrefe and Robert O. Keohane, Cambridge University Press, str.15-52
Humanitarian Intervention: Legal and Political aspects, Danish Institute of International Affairs (1999), Copenhagen
Kaldor, Mary (2005) Elaborating the New War Thesis,in Rethinking the Nature of War, edited by I.Duyvesteyn, Jan Angstrom, Frank Cass London, str.210-224
Laïdi, Zaki (1998) A World without Meaning: The Crisis of Meaning in Inter-national Politics , London&New York: Routledge
Moravcsik, Andrew (1992) Liberalism and International Relations Theory, Harward University and University of Chicago, Paper No. 92-6, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Moravcsik, Andrew (2002) Liberal International Relations Theory: A Scientific Assessment, in Colin Elman, Miriam Fendius Elman, Progres in International Relations Theory, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, str.159-204
Rigterink,S. Anouk, (2013) New Wars in Numbers: an empirical test of the „new war“ thesis, Disussion Paper LSE, London
Savić, Mile (2009) Etika humanitarnih intervencija, Sociološki pregled, vol. XLIII, 2009, No. 4, str.525-543
Heins Volker, Chandler David (2007) Ethics and Foreign Policy: New Perspectives on an Old Problem, in Rethinking Ethical Foreign Policy, Routledge,Taylor&Francis Group, London&New York, str. 3-22