1. Humanitarian intervention today
Part I. Theory
Introduction
2. The origins of the idea of humanitarian intervention: just war
and against tyranny
3. Eurocentrism: ‘civilization’ and the ‘barbarians’
4. International law: advocacy and rejection of humanitarian
intervention
5. Intervention and non-intervention in international political
theory
Part II. Practice
Introduction
6. Intervention in the Greek War of Independence
7. Intervention in Lebanon and Syria
8. The Bulgarian atrocities: a bird’s eye view with emphasis on
Britain
9. The Balkan Crisis of 1875-1878 and Russia: between
humanitarianism and pragmatism
10. The U.S. intervention in Cuba
Part III
11. Conclusion
Select bibliography on International Law until 1945
Select bibliography
Index
Alexis Heraclides is Professor of International Relations and Conflict Resolution at the Panteion University of Social and Political Sciences, Athens. Ada Dialla is Assistant Professor of European History at the Athens School of Fine Arts
‘Sadly, the book is of acute relevance today, at a time when,
amidst the ruins of states that have crumbled, humanitarian crises
have broken out the world over. The book will be of interest not
only to scholars of Ottoman history and international relations in
the nineteenth century, but also to politicians and experts dealing
with humanitarian intervention as both a concept and practice.’
Krisztián Csaplár-Degovics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences,
Hungarian Historical Review 5, No 4 (2016)
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