Bibtex export

 

@article{ Barqueiro2016,
 title = {Regional Organizations and Responsibility to Protect:
Normative Reframing or Normative Change?},
 author = {Barqueiro, Carla and Seaman, Kate and Towey, Katherine Teresa},
 journal = {Politics and Governance},
 number = {3},
 pages = {37-49},
 volume = {4},
 year = {2016},
 issn = {2183-2463},
 doi = {https://doi.org/10.17645/pag.v4i3.642},
 abstract = {The adoption of the principle of the Responsibility to Protect (RtoP) by all United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) member states in 2005, and its reaffirmation in dozens of United Nations Security Council (UNSC) resolutions, indicate that there is a growing consensus around the world that egregious human rights violations necessitate a cooperative and decisive international response. But just as the political debates raged surrounding the precise articulation of RtoP between 2001 and 2005, so too goes the contemporary debate surrounding the implementation of RtoP. Regional divergences in RtoP implementation, in particular, have been noted by many scholars, as regional organizations
implement those elements of RtoP that best suit their policy goals. This paper will apply recent scholarship on normlifecycles, specifically on “norm localization” to the operationalization of RtoP by regional organizations. We seek to
explore regional divergences on RtoP implementation between the European Union (EU), League of Arab States (LAS), and the African Union (AU) on Libya and Syria. From this assessment, three main arguments will be put forward:
(1) regional organizations remain politicized, reframing RtoP in divergent ways that dilute the strength of the norm, (2) politicization of the RtoP discourse constrains regional norm localization processes, (3) politicization and reframing of RtoP inhibit regional normative change and limit the potential for timely and decisive responses to protect civilians. (auhtor's abstract)},
 keywords = {Afrikanische Union; EU; international relations; soziale Norm; Menschenrechte; protecting power; social norm; politische Intervention; adherence to norms; setting of norms; Arab League; politisches Bündnis; militärischer Konflikt; internationale Politik; Arabische Liga; EU; Normsetzung; Schutzmacht; internationale Organisation; African Union; humanitarian intervention; Konfliktbewältigung; humanitäre Intervention; political intervention; militärische Intervention; human rights; Normgeltung; military conflict; international organization; conflict mediation; military intervention; internationale Beziehungen; international politics; political alliance}}