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Preface; Acknowledgements; Abbreviations; Contents; Chapter 1: Introduction; 1.1 The Humanitarian Crises of the 1990s and the Imperatives of Change; 1.2 The Legal Response of ECOWAS and the AU to the Conflicts and Humanitarian Crises; 1.3 The AU-ECOWAS Regional Military Intervention Legal Regimes and International Law; 1.4 The R2P Deadlock and the AU-ECOWAS Regional Military Intervention Legal Regimes Alternatives; 1.5 Synopsis of Theoretical Framework; 1.5.1 A Snapshot of the AU-ECOWAS Regional Military Intervention Legal Regimes Through the New Haven School
1.5.2 The AU-ECOWAS Regional Military Intervention Legal Regimes: An Exercise in Illegal International Legal Reform (IILR)?1.5.3 The AU-ECOWAS Regional Military Intervention Legal Regimes and Articles 2(4), 53(1) and 103 of the UN Charter; 1.5.4 The AU-ECOWAS Regional Military Intervention Legal Regimes and Customary International Law; 1.5.5 The AU-ECOWAS Regional Military Intervention Legal Regimes and the Responsibility to Protect: Convergence or Divergence ...; 1.6 The Structure of the Book; References; Chapter 2: From Humanitarian Intervention to the Responsibility to Protect
2.1 Meaning and Scope of Humanitarian Intervention2.2 State Practice of Humanitarian Intervention; 2.2.1 The Intervention in Greece 1827-1830; 2.2.2 Intervention in Syria 1860-1861; 2.2.3 The Bosnia, Herzegovina and Bulgarian Intervention 1876-1878; 2.2.4 Intervention in Macedonia 1903-1908 and 1912-1913; 2.2.5 Indian Intervention in East Pakistan (Bangladesh) 1971; 2.2.6 Tanzanian Intervention in Uganda (1978); 2.3 The Opinion of Jurists on Humanitarian Intervention Before 1945; 2.4 The Humanitarian Intervention Debates of the 1990s
2.4.1 International Relations Theories of Humanitarian Intervention2.4.2 International Law Theories of Humanitarian Intervention; 2.5 Humanitarian Intervention Under the UN Charter: Four Normative Considerations; 2.5.1 Equality of States; 2.5.2 Sovereignty and Non-intervention; 2.5.3 Prohibition of the Use of Force; 2.6 The Emerging Norm of the Responsibility to Protect; 2.7 Conclusion; References; Chapter 3: Post-Cold War Interventions in Africa and the Origin of the AU-ECOWAS Regional Military Intervention Legal Regimes; 3.1 Introduction
3.2 Liberia: A Brief Historical Background and Genesis of the Conflict3.2.1 The Humanitarian Crisis; 3.2.2 The International Response; 3.3 Somalia: A Brief Historical Background and Genesis of the Conflict; 3.3.1 The Humanitarian Crisis; 3.3.2 The International Response; 3.4 Rwanda: A Brief Historical Background and Genesis of the Conflict; 3.4.1 The Genocide and the Ensuing Humanitarian Crisis; 3.4.2 The International Response; 3.5 Darfur: A Brief Historical Background and Genesis of the Crisis; 3.5.1 The Humanitarian Crisis and ``Ambiguous Genocide;́́ 3.5.2 The International Response
1.5.2 The AU-ECOWAS Regional Military Intervention Legal Regimes: An Exercise in Illegal International Legal Reform (IILR)?1.5.3 The AU-ECOWAS Regional Military Intervention Legal Regimes and Articles 2(4), 53(1) and 103 of the UN Charter; 1.5.4 The AU-ECOWAS Regional Military Intervention Legal Regimes and Customary International Law; 1.5.5 The AU-ECOWAS Regional Military Intervention Legal Regimes and the Responsibility to Protect: Convergence or Divergence ...; 1.6 The Structure of the Book; References; Chapter 2: From Humanitarian Intervention to the Responsibility to Protect
2.1 Meaning and Scope of Humanitarian Intervention2.2 State Practice of Humanitarian Intervention; 2.2.1 The Intervention in Greece 1827-1830; 2.2.2 Intervention in Syria 1860-1861; 2.2.3 The Bosnia, Herzegovina and Bulgarian Intervention 1876-1878; 2.2.4 Intervention in Macedonia 1903-1908 and 1912-1913; 2.2.5 Indian Intervention in East Pakistan (Bangladesh) 1971; 2.2.6 Tanzanian Intervention in Uganda (1978); 2.3 The Opinion of Jurists on Humanitarian Intervention Before 1945; 2.4 The Humanitarian Intervention Debates of the 1990s
2.4.1 International Relations Theories of Humanitarian Intervention2.4.2 International Law Theories of Humanitarian Intervention; 2.5 Humanitarian Intervention Under the UN Charter: Four Normative Considerations; 2.5.1 Equality of States; 2.5.2 Sovereignty and Non-intervention; 2.5.3 Prohibition of the Use of Force; 2.6 The Emerging Norm of the Responsibility to Protect; 2.7 Conclusion; References; Chapter 3: Post-Cold War Interventions in Africa and the Origin of the AU-ECOWAS Regional Military Intervention Legal Regimes; 3.1 Introduction
3.2 Liberia: A Brief Historical Background and Genesis of the Conflict3.2.1 The Humanitarian Crisis; 3.2.2 The International Response; 3.3 Somalia: A Brief Historical Background and Genesis of the Conflict; 3.3.1 The Humanitarian Crisis; 3.3.2 The International Response; 3.4 Rwanda: A Brief Historical Background and Genesis of the Conflict; 3.4.1 The Genocide and the Ensuing Humanitarian Crisis; 3.4.2 The International Response; 3.5 Darfur: A Brief Historical Background and Genesis of the Crisis; 3.5.1 The Humanitarian Crisis and ``Ambiguous Genocide;́́ 3.5.2 The International Response