Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Cover
- Half title
- Title page
- Imprints page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Boxes
- Tables
- Foreword
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction
- Authority, power, legitimacy
- Ideas and norms as drivers of policy
- The United Nations in a changing world context
- The tribalisation and retreat of violence
- The Arab Spring turns to an Islamist winter
- The revenge of geopolitics
- Taming war
- A personal note
- Part I An international organisation for keeping the peace
- 1 Pacific settlement, collective security and international peacekeeping
- International organisation
- Pacific settlement and collective security
- Classical peacekeeping
- Peace operations
- UN peacekeepers pay the ultimate price
- Review and reform of UN peace operations
- Peacekeeping abuses
- Impact of peacekeeping
- Conclusion
- 2 Peace operations and the UN–US relationship
- Overview
- The USA and traditional peacekeeping
- Post-Cold War optimism
- The US retreat from multilateralism
- Relative gains and costs of unilateralism and multilateralism
- Conclusion
- Part II Soft security perspectives
- 3 Human security and human rights
- Human security
- Security as a contested concept
- A template for policy and action
- Human rights
- Universal human rights
- UN machinery
- The retreat of human rights
- UN complicity
- Civil society and the United Nations
- Conclusion
- 4 International criminal justice
- International law and international criminal accountability
- The International Criminal Court
- Normative incoherence
- Democratic authority and accountability deficits
- Institutional integrity
- Peace and justice or peace versus justice?
- Transitional justice
- Normative inconsistency
- Selective victors’ justice or impartial universal justice?
- Torture and rendition
- Universal justice constrained by power politics
- UN Security Council
- The North–South divide and the rule of international law
- Conclusion
- 5 International sanctions
- Defining, measuring and proving success
- The limited utility of sanctions
- Ineffectual
- Nuclear non-proliferation
- Counter-productive
- Self-damaging
- Strained relations with third parties and allies
- Questionable morality
- Termination trap
- Iraq’s oil-for-food programme (OFFP)
- Smartening up the sanctions act
- Conclusion
- Part III Hard security issues
- 6 The nuclear threat
- The state of play of nuclear weapons in 2015
- Disarmament
- Non-proliferation
- North Korea
- Iran
- Incentivised sanctions
- Norms
- Treaties
- The Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty
- The Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty
- Nuclear-weapon-free zones
- Nuclear safety and security
- Compliance and coercion
- Mitigating and eliminating nuclear risks
- Conclusion
- 7 International terrorism
- 9/11 and the ‘war on terror’
- Fashioning a global response
- Nuclear terrorism and ICSANT
- Law enforcement
- Root causes
- Democracy, good governance and the rule of law
- Death from the air: drone strikes as a weapon in the war on terror
- Group grievance
- Intractable conflicts
- Poverty
- Conclusion
- 8 Kosovo 1999 and Iraq 2003 as unilateral interventions
- Kosovo 1999
- The case for NATO intervention: filling a critical protection gap …
- … Or opening new international fault lines?
- Iraq 2003
- Motives
- Enduring costs
- Kosovo as precedent
- Conclusion
- 9 Afghanistan, Libya and Syria: UN-authorised interventions and non-intervention
- Afghanistan 2001–15
- Light UN footprint
- Libya 2011
- Syria 2011–15
- Five reasons for caution
- Chemical weapons use
- Use of force?
- Long-term instability and spread of jihad
- Rule of law
- Conclusion
- 10 From humanitarian intervention to R2P: cosmetic or consequential?
- Annan’s ‘challenge of humanitarian intervention’
- Political
- Humanitarian intervention
- Disrespecting the rest
- Conceptual
- International executive authority: updating principle to align with evolving practice
- Normative
- Procedural
- International intervention in the USA?
- R2P constrains all major power unilateralism in use of force
- Operational
- Conclusion
- 11 The development and evolution of R2P as international policy
- Default policy setting: non-intervention norm breached but not challenged
- Policy challenge: mass atrocity crimes
- Policy innovation: ICISS and the responsibility to protect
- Policy development
- Policy implementation
- Policy paralysis?
- Emerging policy parameters
- Developing countries’ unease in 2001
- Emerging powers today
- Conclusion
- Part IV Institutional developments
- 12 Reforming the United Nations
- The UN record
- The Millennium Development Goals
- Internal reforms
- The 2005 reform effort
- Peace-building Commission
- Security Council reform
- Legitimacy deficits
- Renewed efforts
- Reforming Security Council procedures
- The veto
- Quota politics in the Secretariat?
- Conclusion
- 13 The political role of the United Nations Secretary-General
- Bases of power and authority of the SG
- The key UN constituencies
- Personality
- Leadership
- Dag Hammarskjöld and Kofi Annan
- Ban Ki-moon
- Appointment process
- Conclusion
- Conclusion: at the crossroads of ideals and reality
- The use of force
- Legality and legitimacy
- The UN–US pas de deux
- The United Nations as a bridge between the North and the global South
- The rule of law
- International interventions
- R2P as the intersection of interests and values
- The romantics and the cynics
- Conclusion
- Index




