Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 September 2012
What lessons should policy makers, particularly those at United Nations (UN) headquarters in New York and those of the Clinton administration in Washington, be taking away from the military, humanitarian, and diplomatic dilemmas in the former Yugoslavia? Specifically, what have we learned about moral choice as it pertains to recent UN activities? What in fact are the moral choices, and how might they be framed by those in power to make decisions?
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27 With Larry Minear, the author codirccts a research project on “Humanitarianism and War” that is based at the Watson Institute and the Refugee Policy Group in Washington, DC. In September and early October 1993 he was part of a team in the former Yugoslavia whose field work had begun earlier in the year. Their findings are found in Occasional Paper #18, Humanitarian Action in the Former Yugoslavia: The UN's Role, 1991–1993 (Providence: Watson Institute, 1994).
For additional discussion of humanitarian lessons in this and other conflicts, see Larry Minear and Thomas G. Weiss. Humanitarian Action in Times of War: A Handbook for Practitioners (Boulder: Lynne Rienner, 1993), and Thomas G. Weiss and Larry Minear, eds., Humanitarianism Across Borders: Sustaining Civilians in Times of War (Boulder: Lynne Rienner, 1993).
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34 The author is grateful to Roberta Cohen for insights on this issue. See “Strengthening International Protection for Internally Displaced Persons,” draft article distributed by the Refugee Policy Group, to appear as a chapter in Human Rights: An Agenda for the Next Century (Washington: The American Society of International Law, forthcoming). See also Charles H. Norchi, “Human Rights and Social Issues,” and José E. Alvarez, “Legal Issues,” in A Global Agenda: Issues Before the 48th General Assembly (Lanham MD: University Press of America, 1993), 213–311
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38 See James P. Grant, The State of the World's Children, 1993 (New York: Oxford University Press, 1993).
39 This is a major theme developed in Larry Minear and Thomas G. Weiss, Qualities of Mercy: War and the Global Humanitarian Community, forthcoming.
40 Sanctions in Haiti: Crisis in Humanitarian Action (Cambridge: Harvard Center for Population and Development Studies, 1993).
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42 For further views from two long-time practitioners on this subject, see Frederick C. Cuny, “Humanitarian Assistance in the Post-Cold War Era,” and James Ingram, “The Future Architecture for International Humanitarian Assistance,” in Weiss and Minear, eds., Humanitarianism Across Borders, 151–93.
43 Quoted by Stanley Meisler, “U.N. Relief Hopes Turn to Despair,”Washington Post, October 25, 1993, A1.
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