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Response to Pattison: Whose Responsibility to Protect?
2009
Journal of Military Ethics
James Pattison's argument for the assignment of a duty of humanitarian intervention is interesting and offers a new perspective in the humanitarian intervention debate. However, Pattison's argument suffers from three main problems, each increasingly serious: his definition of success is vague and raises questions about the content of a duty of humanitarian intervention; his consequentialist foundation raises problems of prospective and retrospective judgment; and his intentional omission of the
doi:10.1080/15027570902805190
fatcat:i2lk5p3ksjfgva6hkqpbzo4kfu