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Humanitarian Intervention
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Humanitarian intervention sits at the intersection of international law, foreign policy, and ethics, making it a central subject in political science, international relations, and government courses. The topic asks whether states or international bodies like the United Nations have the right—or even the obligation—to use force within another sovereign nation to prevent mass human rights violations. This tension between sovereignty and the protection of human rights gives the subject its academic weight, raising foundational questions about the limits of state authority, the role of the Security Council, and the conditions under which military or diplomatic action can be considered legitimate.

The papers archived on this topic approach humanitarian intervention from several distinct angles. Case-study analysis dominates, with Somalia and Iraq receiving sustained attention as test cases for how intervention decisions are made and what follows them. Other papers take a policy focus, examining U.S. foreign policy choices and the question of whether the United States should participate in multinational operations. Some essays adopt a broader legal-historical lens, tracing how international law has developed around intervention, human rights protection, and post-conflict nation building in places like Iraq and Afghanistan.

A strong essay on humanitarian intervention needs a clearly bounded thesis—arguing for or against intervention under specific conditions rather than addressing the subject in the abstract. Evidence drawn from the United Nations Charter, Security Council resolutions, and documented case outcomes carries the most analytical weight. The most common pitfall is conflating national interest with humanitarian motive; a rigorous essay distinguishes between the two and addresses how that distinction shapes both the justification and the legitimacy of any intervention.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
NATO's 1999 Kosovo intervention: justification and alternative approaches
¶ … NATO Right to Intervene in Kosovo? Were There Alternatives to War?
Paper Undergraduate
Humanitarian Intervention the Arab Spring
This international relations paper is about humanitarian intervention. Using the situation in Syria as a prompt, the paper focuses on the duties of the international community, especially under the "responsibility to protect" (R2P) doctrine of the United Nations, versus the sovereignty of the state. It is argued that humanitarian intervention, despite its risks and ethical challenges, supersedes the importance of sovereignty to the broader vision of human endeavor.
Paper Doctorate
North Africa Nation Building
Authoritarian regimes in the Middle East and North Africa have been collapsing unexpectedly over the past year, or at least are under severe challenge by their own people for the first time in decades.
Paper Doctorate
Interventionism From the Perspective of Realism vs.
This paper discusses the real purpose behind humanitarian interventions in Libya and in Syria in 2011-2013. It posits the theory that there are two angles to look at the question--the idealistic angle and the realistic angle. The realistic angle states that nations act on behalf of their own national interest and stand to gain from intervention.
Research Paper Doctorate
Clara Barton. It Is Through
¶ … Clara Barton. It is through reviewing her life, and understanding her leadership skills, that nurses can better discover how to become leaders themselves.
Paper Undergraduate
China\'s Influence in Africa Though
China's success on the African continent is not nearly as mystifying or impressive as many foreign policy analysts would have one believe, because strategically China has essentially just followed the United States' lead by mimicking the latter's policy in the Middle East over the last half-century. Recognizing this allows one to examine China's Africa policy from a more objective position in order to not only understand what has made China so successful, but precisely what has kept the United States from effectively maintaining economic and military dominance in the region going forward. Revealing the lingering cultural and historical factors that have benefitted China while hindering the United States subsequently suggests some relatively straightforward methods by which the United States might mitigate China's growing influence while securing its own economic and military interests.
Paper Undergraduate
Authorizing Humanitarian Intervention \"The Clinton
"The Clinton Administration has to realize that their humanitarian intervention efforts sometimes result in more harm than good being accomplished. It has to be realized that countries such as Haiti and Bosnia can…
Paper Doctorate
Global Socioeconomic Perspectives the Issue
The issue of armed intervention in other regions and countries is extremely contentious and has been hotly debated, especially since the Vietnam War. As John Hillen (1996) states, "Deciding when, where, and how to…
Essay Doctorate
International Norms Such as the R2P (Right
The objective of this study is to answer as to whether international norms such as the R2P conflict with the cultural claims of individual states in matters of human rights. It is reported that there has been a failure of the world in protecting victims of "mass atrocities" and that the emerging norm is "to spell out what the states, and the international community, should and must do to prevent that from happening again." (Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect, nd) The United Nations along with other international institutions were established for the primary purpose of preventing or adjudicating conflicts that occur between states. (Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect, nd, paraphrased) Michael Walzer argues that the duty of humanitarian intervention is justified ‘when it is a response … ‘to acts that shock the moral conscience of mankind."
Research Paper Doctorate
Shareholder Activism in the Churches and Human
Shareholder Activism in the Churches and Human Rights Protection