EU Foreign Policy and Humanitarian Intervention: Justice in a Disordered World

28 Pages Posted: 30 Mar 2020

See all articles by Richard Maher

Richard Maher

University College Dublin (UCD) - School of Politics and International Relations

Date Written: March 27, 2020

Abstract

This paper applies three conceptions of global justice—justice as non-domination, as impartiality, and as mutual recognition—to the study and practice of humanitarian intervention in EU foreign policy. It shows that these three conceptions of justice require very different behaviour in the three stages of a humanitarian intervention: the decision to intervene; the conduct of an intervention; and post-intervention reconstruction. As recent cases such as Libya and Syria testify, the EU and EU member states will continue to confront situations in which they must decide whether to wage an armed intervention on humanitarian grounds. This paper aims to show the implications and viability of each conception of global justice as it pertains to humanitarian intervention in EU foreign policy and to provide policymakers with alternative courses of action and modes of self-assessment when it comes to the EU’s ambition to be a value-based actor in world politics.

Keywords: European Union, humanitarian intervention, global justice

Suggested Citation

Maher, Richard, EU Foreign Policy and Humanitarian Intervention: Justice in a Disordered World (March 27, 2020). GLOBUS Research Paper 8/2020, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3562247 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3562247

Richard Maher (Contact Author)

University College Dublin (UCD) - School of Politics and International Relations ( email )

2-3 College Green
Dublin, Leinster
Ireland

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