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  1.  11
    International Authority and the Responsibility to Protect.Anne Orford - 2011 - Cambridge University Press.
    The idea that states and the international community have a responsibility to protect populations at risk has framed internationalist debates about conflict prevention, humanitarian aid, peacekeeping and territorial administration since 2001. This book situates the responsibility to protect concept in a broad historical and jurisprudential context, demonstrating that the appeal to protection as the basis for de facto authority has emerged at times of civil war or revolution - the Protestant revolutions of early modern Europe, the bourgeois and communist revolutions (...)
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  2. International Law and its Others.Anne Orford (ed.) - 2006 - Cambridge University Press.
    Institutional and political developments since the end of the Cold War have led to a revival of public interest in, and anxiety about, international law. Liberal international law is appealed to as offering a means of constraining power and as representing universal values. This book brings together scholars who draw on jurisprudence, philosophy, legal history and political theory to analyse the stakes of this turn towards international law. Contributors explore the history of relations between international law and those it defines (...)
     
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    The Oxford handbook of the theory of international law.Anne Orford, Florian Hoffmann & Martin Clark (eds.) - 2016 - Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press.
    Histories -- Approaches -- Regimes and doctrines -- Debates.
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