Katy Harsant
Selective Responsibility in the United Nations: Colonial Histories and Critical Inquiry
Selective Responsibility in the United Nations: Colonial Histories and Critical Inquiry
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- More about Selective Responsibility in the United Nations: Colonial Histories and Critical Inquiry
The United Nations claims to maintain international peace and security, but its unequal power relations perpetuate colonial origins and privilege certain states. Harsant challenges the dominant narrative of the UN as an institution of equality and progress and argues that the privilege afforded to these states is the result of power relations established through the colonial encounter. This book offers a critical analysis of the UN's structure and the unequal power relations it has perpetuated, and calls for a better understanding of the colonialisms role in preserving the existing global order.
Format: Hardback
Length: 192 pages
Publication date: 31 August 2022
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
The United Nations claims to exist in order to maintain international peace and security, providing a space within which all states can work together. However, why does the UN invoke its responsibility to protect through humanitarian intervention in some instances but not others? Why is it that five states have the power to decide whether or not to intervene? This book challenges the dominant narrative of the UN as an institution of equality and progress by analyzing the colonial origins of the organization and revealing the unequal power relations it has perpetuated. Harsant argues that the United Nations is unable to fulfill its claims around the protection of international peace and security due to its very structure and the privilege of certain states. Moreover, through a rigorous examination of the history of the UN and how those structures came to be, she argues that the privilege afforded to these states is the result of power relations established through the colonial encounter.
In order to understand the pressing contemporary issues of how the United Nations operates, particularly the Security Council, this book discusses issues of power and sovereignty by de-silencing the narratives of resistance and reconstructing a history of the United Nations that takes this colonial and anti-colonial relationship into account. This is a bold challenge to the eurocentrism that dominates International Relations discourse and a call to better understand the colonialisms role in preserving the existing global order.
Weight: 472g
Dimension: 237 x 158 x 21 (mm)
ISBN-13: 9781786610287
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