Book contents
- The Cambridge History of America and the World
- The Cambridge History of America and the World
- The Cambridge History of America and the World
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Contributors to Volume IV
- General Introduction: What is America and the World?
- Introduction to Volume IV
- Part I Ordering a World of States
- Part II Challenging a World of States
- Part III New World Disorder?
- 23 The Illusions of the United States’ Great Power Politics after the Cold War
- 24 Neoliberalism as a Form of US Power
- 25 The US Construction of “Islam” as Ally and Enemy on the Global Stage
- 26 Technology and Networks of Communication
- 27 Humanitarian Intervention and US Power
- 28 Refugees, Statelessness, and the Disordering of Citizenship
- 29 Liberty, Security, and America’s War on Terror
- 30 The Global Wars on Terror
- 31 America and the World in the Anthropocene
- Index
27 - Humanitarian Intervention and US Power
from Part III - New World Disorder?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 November 2021
- The Cambridge History of America and the World
- The Cambridge History of America and the World
- The Cambridge History of America and the World
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Maps
- Contributors to Volume IV
- General Introduction: What is America and the World?
- Introduction to Volume IV
- Part I Ordering a World of States
- Part II Challenging a World of States
- Part III New World Disorder?
- 23 The Illusions of the United States’ Great Power Politics after the Cold War
- 24 Neoliberalism as a Form of US Power
- 25 The US Construction of “Islam” as Ally and Enemy on the Global Stage
- 26 Technology and Networks of Communication
- 27 Humanitarian Intervention and US Power
- 28 Refugees, Statelessness, and the Disordering of Citizenship
- 29 Liberty, Security, and America’s War on Terror
- 30 The Global Wars on Terror
- 31 America and the World in the Anthropocene
- Index
Summary
Humanitarian intervention seeks to stop mass atrocities – killings, rapes, ethnic cleansing – within countries. From 1945 until the formal end of the Cold War in 1991, many more noncombatants were killed by violence within countries than by war among them. The examples, since 1991 alone, include Rwanda, the Congo, Bosnia, East Timor, Kosovo, Libya, and Syria. In the Congo alone, violence, but particularly the perilous conditions it created, claimed between 3 and 5 million lives between 1996 and 2003. Thomas Hobbes averred that the state alone could prevent people’s lives from being “nasty, brutish and short”; but in these and other instances, governments were the principal perpetrators of atrocities, which they methodically planned and committed to achieve political ends.
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- Information
- The Cambridge History of America and the World , pp. 632 - 661Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022