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ID193480
Title ProperInternational memories in global politics
Other Title InformationMaking the case for or against UN intervention in Libya and Syria
LanguageENG
AuthorBachleitner, Kathrin
Summary / Abstract (Note)This paper is interested in the role and function of memories in United Nations Security Council debates about humanitarian intervention. It posits that historical experiences and their lessons serve as interpretative devices for the abstract international norms and principles under discussion. The paper speaks of ‘international memories’ where the meaning and lessons derived from the past coalesce among a group of states. Empirically, its case study explores how the memories of totalitarianism/fascism and colonialism were employed in United Nations (UN) representatives’ verbal pleas to intervene in Libya and Syria after the Arab Spring. It finds that those who supported or opposed humanitarian intervention held different interpretations of these memories and their lessons. In each case, however, memories provided essential normative guidance to states when it came to implementing the abstract international principles, norms, and rights that underlie humanitarian intervention.
`In' analytical NoteReview of International Studies Vol. 50, No.2; Mar 2024: p.271 - 288
Journal SourceReview of International Studies Vol: 50 No 2
Key WordsColonialism ;  Syria ;  Humanitarian Intervention ;  Libya ;  Memories ;  United Nations ;  lessons from the past ;  totalitarianism/fascism


 
 
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