02075nam a2200409 a 450000100060000000300080000600500170001400800410003102000230007202000150009502000300011002000260014002000260016603500190019204000420021104100080025308200250026110000340028624501210032026400560044126400110049730000270050833600260053533700280056133800270058949000410061650400680065750503990072552002730112465000500139765000370144765000180148465000370150265000180153965000760155783000320163382100BD-RjUL20231012124529.0231011t20212021enk b 001 0 eng d a0367551292q(pbk.) a0367551284 a9780367551285q(hardback) a9780367551292q(pbk.) z9781003092094 (ebook) a(BD-RjUL)82100 aYDXbengcYDXerdadOCLdDLCdBD-RjUL aeng04223a341.48bADM 20211 aAdams, Simon,d1968-eauthor.10aMass atrocities, the responsibility to protect and the future of human rights :b'if not now, when?' /cSimon Adams. 1aLondon :bRoutledge, Taylor & Francis Group,c2021. 4c©2021 aix, 143 pages ;c24 cm atextbtxt2rdacontent aunmediatedbn2rdamedia avolumebnc2rdacarrier1 aRoutledge global institutions series aIncludes bibliographical references (pages [134-135) and index.0 aIntroduction: It wasn't supposed to be this way -- 1. Why humans commit atrocities and how societies can change -- 2. Regime change in Libya -- 3. Moments on the margins of Syria's civil war -- 4. Terrorism, genocide and the Islamic State -- 5. Climate change and mass atrocities -- 6. The fate of the Rohingya and the future of human rights -- 7. Conclusion: The mass graves that were not dug. aThis book ambitiously weaves together history and politics to explain all of the major situations where mass atrocities have occurred, or been prevented, over the 15 years since the 'Responsibility to Protect' (R2P) was adopted at the 2005 UN World Summit--back cover. 0aResponsibility to protect (International law) 0aAtrocitiesxLaw and legislation. 0aHuman rights. 7aAtrocitiesxLaw and legislation. 7aHuman rights. 7aResponsibility to protect (International law)2fast0(OCoLC)fst01895199 0aGlobal institutions series.