Introduction -- The responsibility to protect at 15 -- High-level panels -- Rwanda, Kosovo and the International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty -- From the right to persecute to the responsibility to protect : feuerbachian inversions of rights and responsibilities in state-citizen relations -- From humanitarian intervention to R2P : cosmetic or consequential? -- R2P after Libya and Syria : engaging emerging powers -- R2P's "structural" problems : a response to Roland Paris -- The UN Secretary-General and the forgotten third R2P responsibility -- Protection gaps for civilian victims of political violence -- Atrocity crimes and global governance -- Retrospect and prospect.
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