'Failures to protect' in international law

Open Access
Authors
Publication date 2015
Host editors
  • M. Weller
Book title The Oxford handbook of the use of force in international law
ISBN
  • 9780199673049
ISBN (electronic)
  • 9780191760204
Series Oxford handbooks in law
Pages (from-to) 437-461
Publisher Oxford: Oxford University Press
Organisations
  • Faculty of Law (FdR) - Amsterdam Center for International Law (ACIL)
Abstract
Every new mass atrocity tends to provoke a critique of outside actors that failed to protect populations. Many observers are no longer content with condemning perpetrators and extend their moral outrage to bystanders who should have done more. However, from a legal perspective there is something disingenuous about applying a "failure to protect critique" in one brush to both perpetrators and bystanders. This paper argues that failures to protect of bystanders are built in and to a large extent induced and legitimized by the international legal system. International law provides a framework for political debate on how this shared responsibility should be performed: who should protect where and when. But this framework allows individual bystanders to hide behind a failing political process, and to escape individual responsibility for failures to protect.
Document type Chapter
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1093/law/9780199673049.003.0021
Downloads
447443 (Submitted manuscript)
357548848 (Final published version)
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