Articles

Rethinking International Intervention

Michael Aaronson • Mar 19 2012 • Articles

Less coercive forms of intervention have been relatively neglected by politicians and academics. The case of Syria clearly demonstrates the pitfalls of this approach.

What Can Be Done in Response to the Crisis in Syria?

Aidan Hehir • Mar 19 2012 • Articles

The best response to the crisis in Syria is the deployment of a UN peacekeeping force to oversee an inclusive political process for a new Syrian constitution.

Depletion: The Costs of Unpaid Domestic Work

How is it possible to know if the non-recognition of the value of domestic work undermines the possibilities for achieving gender justice?

Will KONY2012 Make a Difference?

Tim Allen • Mar 18 2012 • Articles

If the KONY2012 campaign can really be about ending impunity it might yet prove more valuable than many analysts predict – even though the videos are misleading.

Climate Change and the Military

Michael Brzoska • Mar 16 2012 • Articles

While knowledge about the impact of climate change on the role of militaries is scant, planning for a future with climate change has begun.

“KONY 2012” and the Magic of International Relations

Sverker Finnström • Mar 15 2012 • Articles

The Invisible Children films reduce, depoliticize and dehistoricize a murky reality of globalized war into an essentialized black-and-white story.

Syria and the Responsibility to Protect: Rhetoric Meets Reality

Aidan Hehir • Mar 14 2012 • Articles

Syria surely demonstrates, in all too graphic detail, the limits of R2P and the pressing need for creative thinking about profound reforms of the UN which address the P5 veto in the Security Council and the absence of a UN standing army.

Climate Change, the Laws of War and the Military

Karen Hulme • Mar 14 2012 • Articles

The laws of war may need to be amended in order to protect those facilities and components such as forests and flood defences that societies will rely upon in the future to protect us from the impacts of climate change.

To Strike or Not to Strike: What is the Endgame in Iran?

Mira Rapp-Hooper • Mar 12 2012 • Articles

Amid all the debate over whether to attack Iran, the most important question to ask is whether this policy will keep Iran non-nuclear indefinitely?

A Pyrrhic Victory? The ‘War on Terror’ and ‘The Triumph of Just War’

Cian O Driscoll • Mar 10 2012 • Articles

If we wish to think about whether the triumph of just war is meaningful or pyrrhic, we need to examine how just war discourse functions. The challenge that confronts just war theorists today is to devise new and more sophisticated ways of pursuing this task.

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