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리비아 사태 이후의 보호책임(R2P)과 북한에의 함의The Responsibility to Protect (R2P) after Libya: Practical Implication for North Korea

Other Titles
The Responsibility to Protect (R2P) after Libya: Practical Implication for North Korea
Authors
이신화
Issue Date
2013
Publisher
고려대학교 일민국제관계연구원
Keywords
Responsibility to Protect (R2P); Humanitarian Intervention; Global Security; Armed Conflict; The United Nations; Human Rights Violation; North Korean Problem; 보호책임(R2P); 인도적 개입; 글로벌안보; 무력분쟁; 유엔; 인권유린; 북한문제
Citation
국제관계연구, v.18, no.1, pp.5 - 37
Indexed
KCI
Journal Title
국제관계연구
Volume
18
Number
1
Start Page
5
End Page
37
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/105826
ISSN
1738-0154
Abstract
The responsibility to protect (R2P) is a new norm or set of principles that redefines sovereignty as a responsibility rather than as a privilege or a means of control, which offers a policy guideline on when and how the international community should intervene for the sake of human protection in the face of mass atrocity crimes. Just as in humanitarian intervention, however, the R2P faces several dilemmas: How serious should humanitarian emergencies be to warrant international intervention? Why did we need intervention in Libya while not in Syria where the situation seems to have been more serious than Libya in terms of the necessity of civilian protection? How can the narrowly defined R2P crimes accommodate those suffering in complex humanitarian crises? Is it feasible for the international community to opt for military intervention in North Korea based on the principles of the R2P if a crisis occurs as it did in Libya? Along the line of these inquiries, the paper reviews the concept and debates of the R2P, discusses the possibility of the R2P applied to the real world through examining cases such as Libya, Syria, Sudan Darfur, and Myanmar. Also, the feasibility and validity of expanding the R2P scope, only limited to the "four R2P crimes(i.e. genocide, ethnic cleansing, war crimes, and crimes against humanity), will be assessed, with particular emphasis on the practical implications for the case of North Korea
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