Responsibility to Protect (R2P)

The Imminent Risk of Genocide in Darfur: Never Again Cannot Become a Relic of the Past

by and

Dec 7th, 2023

Invest in Early Prevention and Continuous Learning to Help Curb Atrocities in a Challenging Era

by

Nov 29th, 2023

If Mass Atrocity Prevention Has a Future, the Responsibility to Protect Can’t Afford to Be Niche

by

Nov 14th, 2023

Why the United Nations Keeps Failing Victims of Atrocity Crimes

by

Nov 9th, 2023

From Darfur to Darfur: The Fall and Rise of Indifference to Mass Atrocities in Africa

by

Nov 2nd, 2023

The Discomforts of Politics: What Future for Atrocity Prevention?

by

Oct 31st, 2023

The Just Security Podcast: The UN’s R2P Problem

by , , , and

Sep 1st, 2023

The UN Should Increase Support for the Responsibility to Protect

by

Aug 17th, 2023

Does the ‘Responsibility to Protect’ Require States to go to War with Russia?

by

Mar 25th, 2022

From ‘8888’ to ‘2121’: A New Generation of Resistance in Myanmar

by , and

Feb 1st, 2022

Beyond the Coup in Myanmar: The ASEAN Way Must Change

by and

May 14th, 2021

The Caesar Sanctions Help Reinforce Norms Enshrined in International Law

by

Jul 21st, 2020

Germany’s Research Report on the Syria Strikes: Unlawful Acts of Reprisal

by

May 10th, 2018

UPDATE: Mapping States’ Reactions to the Syria Strikes of April 2018

by , , and

May 7th, 2018

Mapping States’ Reactions to the U.S. Strikes Against Syria of April 2018–A Comprehensive Guide

by , , and

May 7th, 2018

Mapping States’ Reactions to the Syria Strikes of April 2018

by , , and

Apr 22nd, 2018

Bad Legal Arguments for the Syria Strikes

by and

Apr 14th, 2018

Syria, Chemical Weapons, and a Qualitative Threshold for Humanitarian Intervention

by

Apr 10th, 2018

US Responsibility Arising From Russian Violations of the Law of Armed Conflict

by

Sep 21st, 2016

U.S. Policy on the ICC Crime of Aggression Announced

by

Apr 21st, 2015

ISIL = Genocide?

by

Aug 29th, 2014