Alex Bellamy and Tim Dunne: Preface
PART I: INTRODUCTION
1: Alex Bellamy and Tim Dunne: R2P in Theory and Practice
PART II: HISTORY
2: Davide Rodogno: Humanitarian Intervention in the Nineteenth-Century
3: Tim Dunne and Eglantine Staunton: The Genocide Convention & Cold War Humanitarian Intervention
4: Thomas G. Weiss: The Turbulent 1990's: R2P Precedents and Prospects
5: Roberta Cohen and Francis Deng: Sovereignty as Responsibility: Building Block for R2P
6: Ramesh Thakur: Rwanda, Kosovo and the International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty
7: Charles Cater and David Malone: The Genesis of R2P: Kofi Annan's Intervention Dilemma
PART III: THEORY
8: Melissa Labonte: R2P's Status as a Norm
9: Luke Glanville: Sovereignty
10: Toni Erskine: Moral Agents of Protection and Supplementary Responsibilities to Protect
11: Nigel Rodley: R2P and International Law: A Paradigm Shift?
12: Faith Mabera and Yolanda Spies: How Well Does R2P Travel Beyond the West?
Justin Morris and Nicholas Wheeler: The Responsibility Not to Veto: A Responsibility too far?
PART IV: UN ORDER
14: Alex Bellamy: UN Security Council
15: Megan Schmidt: UN General Assembly
16: Edward Luck: Getting There, Being There: The Dual Roles of the Special Adviser
17: Ekkehard Strauss: UN Human Rights Council and the High Commissioner for Human Rights
18: David Carment, Sean Winchester, and Joe Landry: The Role of Regional Organisations: A Responsibility Gap?
PART V: GLOBAL PERSPECTIVES
19: Kwesi Aning and Frank Okyere: The African Union
20: Sarah Teitt: Asia Pacific and South Asia
21: Chiara de Franco, Christoph Meyer, and Karen E. Smith: Europe and the European Union
22: Ekatarina Stepanova: Russia
23: Mónica Serrano: Latin America
24: Fateh Azzam and Coralie Hindawi: Middle East and North Africa
25: Bruce Jentleson: United States
PART VI: CROSS-CUTTING THEMES
26: Sara Davies: Gender
27: Roland Paris: The Blurry Boundary between Peacebuilding and R2P
28: Paul Williams: The R2P, Protection of Civilians, and Peacekeeping Operations
29: Hugo Slim: Saving Individuals from the Scourge of War: Complementarity and Tension Between R2P and Humanitarian Action
30: Taylor Seybolt: The Use of Force
31: Ruben Reike: Conflict Prevention and the R2P
32: Phil Orchard: Refugees and Displaced People
33: Oliver Stuenkel: Responsibility while Protecting
34: Jason Ralph: The International Criminal Court
35: Jeremy Farrall: The use of UN sanctions to address mass atrocities
36: Michael Doyle: The Politics of Global Humanitarianism: The R2P before and after Libya
PART VII: CASES
37: Charles Hunt: Cote d'Ivoire
38: Jess Gifkins: Darfur
39: Arthur Boutellis: Democratic Republic of the Congo
40: Serena Sharma: Kenya
41: Simon Adams: Libya
42: John Karlsrud: Mali
43: Jurgen Haacke: Myanmar
44: Boris Kondoch: North Korea
45: Walter Lotze: Somalia
46: Alison Giffen: South Sudan
47: Kim Nackers: Sri Lanka
48: Bessma Momani and Tanzeel Hakak: Syria
PART VIII: FACING THE FUTURE
49: Gareth Evans: R2P: The Next Ten Years
50: Rosemary Foot: The State, Development, and Humanitarianism: China's Shaping of the Trajectory of the R2P
51: Kishore Mabubhani: Embedding R2P in a New Universal Declaration of Human Responsibilities
52: Lloyd Axworthy: Resetting the Narrative on Peace and Security: R2P in the Next Ten Years
53: Jennifer Welsh: R2P's Next Ten Years: Deepening and Extending the Consensus