Mass Atrocities, the Responsibility to Protect and the Future of Human Rights: If Not Now, When?
In: Global Institutions Ser.
Intro -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Contents -- List of abbreviations -- Introduction: It wasn't supposed to be this way -- Notes -- 1. Why humans commit atrocities and how societies can change -- Genocide genesis -- Those who kill and those who don't -- Killer apes? -- Kofi Annan and the responsibility to protect -- Kenya and R2P in practice -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 2. Regime change in Libya -- The Arab Spring -- The UN Security Council responds -- All necessary measures -- Regime change -- Brazil and the responsibility while protecting -- The responsibility to rebuild -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 3. Moments on the margins of Syria's civil war -- The corridors of power and the hallways of indifference (summer 2011) -- That Sarajevo market moment (autumn 2013) -- No one left to text (winter 2016) -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 4. Terrorism, genocide and the Islamic State -- Terrorism versus atrocities -- Hungry for genocide -- Cultural cleansing -- Overthrowing the caliphate -- Justice and accountability -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 5. Climate change and mass atrocities -- Climate change -- War, famine and cassava in Mozambique -- Threat multiplier -- War and water in Yemen -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 6. The fate of the Rohingya and the future of human rights -- Lowest-common-denominator diplomacy -- Global progress versus perpetual crisis -- The price of prevention -- Pursuing international justice -- Conclusion -- Notes -- 7. Conclusion: The mass graves that were not dug -- What the United Nations can do -- What governments can do -- What parliaments can do -- What you can do -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Epilogue -- Notes -- Selected bibliography -- Index.