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WHO SHOULD INTERVENE?

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WHO SHOULD INTERVENE?

Distributing the duties of humanitarian intervention

Fredrik D. Hjorthen Göteborg Studies in Politics 150

2017

Avhandlingen baseras på följande delstudier:

Hjorthen, FD. (2017) Humanitarian Intervention and Burden-Sharing Justice.

Unpublished manuscript.

Hjorthen, FD and Duus-Otterström, G. (2016) Humanitarian intervention and historical responsibility. Journal of global ethics 12(2): 187- 203.

Hjorthen, FD. (2017) Who Should Intervene? Unpublished manuscript.

Hjorthen, FD. (2017) Who Should Pay for Humanitarian Intervention?

European Journal of Political Theory 0(0): 1-20. Epub ahead of print.

Akademisk avhandling för filosofie doktorsexamen i statsvetenskap som med tillstånd av samhällsvetenskapliga fakultetsnämnden vid Göteborgs universitet framlägges till offentlig granskning fredagen den 19 maj 2017, kl. 13.15 i Säppören, Campus Haga, Sprängkullsgatan 25, Göteborg.

DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE

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Hjorthen, Fredrik D. 2017. Who Should Intervene? Distributing the Duties of Humanitarian Intervention. Göteborg Studies in Politics 150, edited by Bo Rothstein, Department of Political Science, University of Gothenburg, Box 711, 405 30

Göteborg, Sweden. ISBN 978-91-629-0179-0, ISSN 0346-5942

Abstract

Many theorists argue that there can be a duty to intervene militarily in order to halt massive violations of basic human rights in other countries. But less is known about how this duty should be assigned to particular agents. Given that dispersed duties tend to invite inaction, and seeing as some agents are likely to have stronger duties than others, examining how the duties of intervention should be specified has both practical and moral significance. In this dissertation Fredrik D. Hjorthen seeks to fill this gap in the literature by answering questions such as: What role should historical responsibility play for the assignment of the duty to intervene? Who should commit their military forces to carry out the intervention? How should the economic and material costs of intervention be distributed? What reforms should be implemented to ensure that the duty to intervene can be effectively discharged and the burdens shared fairly? To answer these questions this dissertation provides a systematic analysis of morally relevant criteria and how they should be combined. Consistent with previous work, the ability of potential interveners to intervene effectively is of central importance. But as this dissertation shows, this is not all that matters. There are sound moral and practical reasons why more attention should be paid to distributive fairness among prospective interveners and concerns of historical responsibility. A framework is provided that takes this into account both when it comes to the question of who should undertake intervention and when it comes to who should bear the economic burden of intervention.

Keywords: humanitarian intervention, responsibility to protect, duty to intervene, international justice, historical responsibility

References

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