The African Union and the Responsibility to Protect : lessons Learnt from the 2011 United Nations Security Council Intervention in Libya

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dc.contributor.advisor Spies, Yolanda Kemp
dc.contributor.postgraduate Mabera, Faith Kerubo
dc.date.accessioned 2014-12-08T06:10:03Z
dc.date.available 2014-12-08T06:10:03Z
dc.date.created 2015-04
dc.date.issued 2015 en_US
dc.description Dissertation (MA)--University of Pretoria, 2015. en_US
dc.description.abstract This study examines the extent to which Responsibility to Protect (R2P) principles are embedded in the African Union’s interventionist framework. The AU has been heralded as a trailblazer of R2P, enshrining its attendant principles in the Union’s 2000 Constitutive Act, five years before the emerging norm’s adoption by world leaders at the 2005 World Summit. However, in the case of the recent humanitarian crisis in Libya, and the UN Security Council’s subsequent intervention during 2011, the AU failed to invoke R2P, jettisoning Article 4(h) of its own Constitutive Act and insisting on a negotiated solution to the crisis. This position placed the Union on a collision course with several other regional organisations, notably the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation which assumed a leading role in the implementation of the UNSC mandate to intervene. The AU’s actions also placed into question the rhetoric-reality nexus of its responsibility to protect. At issue is thus the matter of norm localisation, and whether lack thereof and/or other challenges are inhibiting consolidation of R2P within the AU’s security culture. The study therefore traces the institutionalisation of the guiding tenets of R2P within the evolving AU Peace and Security Architecture, and investigates the operationalisation thereof (arguably the most contentious dimension to the global discourse on R2P) in the case of the 2011 UNSC intervention in Libya. en_US
dc.description.availability Unrestricted en_US
dc.description.department Political Sciences en_US
dc.identifier.citation Mabera, FK 2015, The African Union and the Responsibility to Protect: Lessons learnt from the 2011 United Nations Security Council intervention in Libya, MA Dissertation, University of Pretoria, Pretoria, viewed yymmdd <http://hdl.handle.net/2263/42830> en_US
dc.identifier.other A2015
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2263/42830
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher University of Pretoria en_ZA
dc.rights © 2015 University of Pretoria. All rights reserved. The copyright in this work vests in the University of Pretoria. No part of this work may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, without the prior written permission of the University of Pretoria. en_US
dc.subject R2P en_US
dc.subject African Union en_US
dc.subject Libya en_US
dc.subject UNSC en_US
dc.subject Norm localization en_US
dc.subject UCTD
dc.title The African Union and the Responsibility to Protect : lessons Learnt from the 2011 United Nations Security Council Intervention in Libya en_US
dc.type Dissertation en_US


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