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  1. Is There a Duty to Intervene? Intervention and the Responsibility to Protect.James Pattison - 2013 - Philosophy Compass 8 (6):570-579.
    This article considers the duty to undertake humanitarian intervention. It first examines the arguments for the duty to intervene and questions the possibility of supererogatory humanitarian intervention. It then considers the leading objections to this duty which, it is argued, are largely unpersuasive. In the final section, the article considers the duty to intervene in the context of the responsibility to protect doctrine, which provides the framework within which debates about humanitarian intervention now in large part occur.
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  • Assessing the Responsibility to Protect’s motivational capacity: The role of humanity.Samuel Jarvis - 2018 - Journal of International Political Theory 14 (1):107-124.
    While the concept of humanity is most often referred to as the moral source of the Responsibility to Protect’s motivational capacity, humanity’s normative status and value has continued to be left assumed and/or unexplored. Consequently, there remains a considerable lack of analysis into humanity’s role in supposedly helping to both locate moral harm and subsequently provide a motivational cause that can drive protection practices in support of the Responsibility to Protect principle. In response to this lacuna, this article puts forward (...)
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  • La soberanía como responsabilidad y los fundamentos del nuevo intervencionismo humanitario.Luis Felipe Piedrahita Ramírez - 2015 - Estudios de Filosofía (Universidad de Antioquia) 51.
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