Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Foreword
- Abbreviations and Acronyms
- Introduction
- PART I The Evolution of Humanitarian Interventions in a Global Era
- PART II The Limits of Sovereignty and the Ethics of Interventions
- PART III The Politics of Post-intervention (Re-)Building and Humanitarian Engagement
- Index
Introduction
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 January 2018
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Foreword
- Abbreviations and Acronyms
- Introduction
- PART I The Evolution of Humanitarian Interventions in a Global Era
- PART II The Limits of Sovereignty and the Ethics of Interventions
- PART III The Politics of Post-intervention (Re-)Building and Humanitarian Engagement
- Index
Summary
The need to fundamentally rethink interventions is before us. Driven by a combination of pressing humanitarian need as well as conceptual and theoretical dilemmas that limit the value of analysis, it is evident we are seemingly at the crossroads. The crises in Syria and Iraq – the human rights abuses, the destruction of cities and the attenuating flows of refugees into Europe – have only been enough to garner specific military action from external powers in ways closely aligned to national interests. There is the sense that despite being decades on from the end of the Cold War and notwithstanding the varying kinds of interventions in the name of humanitarian ends that have taken place, we have come full circle. For all their challenges and faults, at the end of the twentieth century Kosovo and Timor-Leste suggested that there was enough benefit gained by interventions that they had a future in global politics. The post-9/11 military invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan have, however, come to dominate discourse as wars fought overwhelmingly for state security rather than humanitarian ends (even though the latter are used instrumentally as a justification at times). Moreover, as events in Syria have unfolded, it has become even harder to discern who would be assisted, and to what end, by a large-scale intervention like those that occurred across the 1990s. The widening of Syria's civil war into a regional one, and the toll on civilians (approximately 260,000 at time of publication), reflects elements that are described in ‘new wars’ analysis, and yet are overlain with shifting forms of globalised warfare, intersections with terrorism, while reaffirming what appears to be more classical superpower rivalries (though now it is between different versions of empire and capitalism). It is such a riven mess that it is quite possible that the only ‘end game’ will come in the form of general annihilation.
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- Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2017