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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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Paper Doctorate
Human activities and impacts on global warming
This is a brief introduction to global warming. Global warming, also called climate change, is a phenomenon that not only is a threat to other species but also has the potential drastically change the climate so that it has severe and negative consequences for the human population of the planet. The definition of global warming is as follows: The gradual increase in the temperature of the earth's atmosphere, believed to be due to the greenhouse effect caused by gases, such as Carbon Dioxide emissions from burning fossil fuels or from deforestation, which trap heat that would otherwise escape from Earth; a type of greenhouse effect. Global warming, which is at least partly due to the rising concentrations of greenhouses in the atmosphere, is generally noted by primary source of greenhouse gases which is carbon dioxide (CO2).
Research Paper Doctorate
Global Refugee Regime Seems to Be Veering
Global Refugee Regime Seems to Be Veering Away From Traditional Rules
Research Paper Undergraduate
Nation Building in Iraq
After a decade to examine the consequences of America's decision to invade Iraq – and engage in a massive nation building effort after successfully ousting the brutal Baath Party dictatorship of Saddam Hussein – it has become abundantly clear that a war fought under false pretenses can never be productive in a geopolitical sense. As foreign policy scholars have observed in the wake of your predecessor's calamitous course of action, "President Bush said that our goal was a unified, democratic Iraq that could govern itself, sustain itself, defend itself, and serve as an ally in the ‘War on Terror' … (but) it's apparent that no part of this goal has been achieved, and that the progress made toward them is fleeting" (Babbin, 2012). This is why the administration's current commitment to a more responsible foreign policy must remain of paramount importance, because as the power in the Middle East continues to crumble and recalibrate via revolution, the temptation to engage in further nation building efforts will inevitably intensify.
Research Paper Doctorate
Humanitarian Intervention and NATO's Role Against Terrorism
One of the most purposeful and successful undertakings that has benefited third world nations is humanitarian intervention. It is an act arising out of the human collective spirit as people come together through…
Paper Doctorate
International Relations Theories Question Set
The faith placed by Idealists in their utopian notion of collective security was shattered by Hitler's unopposed domination of Europe after the conclusion of World War I, and the systematic cessation of hostilities in World War II gave rise to the scientific school of Realism (Dunne, Kurki, and Smith 178). The eventual evolution of neo-liberal and neo-classical thought provided diametrically opposed worldviews that were nonetheless predicated on the same fundamental paradigm: international relations are governed by an objective reality based on the identities and interests of states (Dunne, Kurki, and Smith 178). When the Cold War, and its continual specter of mutually assured destruction via nuclear warfare, ended in the late 1980's, this significant step in normalizing geopolitical relations was not secured by an invasion force but rather through the paired program of economic and social reforms known as perestroika and glasnost respectively. International relations scholars have observed that "the importance of Gorbachev's ‘New Thinking' in bringing an end to the cold war, the increasing importance of norms in humanitarian intervention, and the spread of liberal democratic values raised critical questions about the exclusive emphasis of realist theory on material interest and power" (Dunne, Kurki, and Smith 179).
Paper Doctorate
Humanitarian Intervention and National Sovereignty: The R2P Framework
Humanitarian intervention is morally and legally justified in response to internal atrocities, even at the expense of national sovereignty.
Paper Doctorate
The Syrian conflict: causes, progression, and humanitarian impact
Syria is an example of a failed state because the regime of Bashar al-Assad has failed to uphold the fundamental duty of every government: to protect its citizens from harm. The loss of basic services, including…
Research Paper Doctorate
Iraq War: Humanitarian Intervention? No News Item
No news item garners more interest and more debate today in America and around the world than the impending second war against Iraq. President George Bush led a coalition in a war against Iraq over a decade ago after…
Paper Undergraduate
Ethics of war
This paper provides a review of the relevant literature to define and describe just wars and unjust wars, their antecedents and implications for modern states. Although the primary reason that is used to justify just wars remains self-defense, this concept has been expanded over the past century or so to include the defense of others. These points and others are followed by a summary of the research and important findings in the conclusion.
Essay Doctorate
Legal regulation of conservation laws in UN member countries and territories
Legal Regulation Conservation Laws on UN Countries Territories