“Responsibility to Protect” as a Political and Legal Rationale of Uses of Force in International Relations
Abstract
This article explores the problem addressing the political and legal rationale of the “humanitarian intervention”. The right to perform “humanitarian intervention” is to be derived from moral obligations, and presumed as a resume of the universally agreed prohibition of gross violations of human rights. That right was termed as a “responsibility to protect”, and confessed by the international community as a political obligation, which did not come in contradiction with the law, rather than as a “law” if nothing else.
About the Author
Stanislav Valentinovich Korostelev
North-West Institute of Management - branch of the Russian Presidential Academy of National Economy and Public Administration
Russian Federation
References
1. Korostelev S. V. About Epiphenomenal Nature of International Law [Ob epifenomenal’nom kharaktere mezhdunarodnogo prava] // Administrative consulting [Upravlencheskoe konsul’tirovanie]. 2013. № 12. P. 29–34.
For citations:
Korostelev S.V.
“Responsibility to Protect” as a Political and Legal Rationale of Uses of Force in International Relations. Administrative Consulting. 2015;(8):26-31.
(In Russ.)
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