GoS
Government of Sudan
|
GoSS
|
Government of South Sudan
|
HRW
|
Human Rights Watch
|
HSM
|
Holy Spirit Movement
|
IASC
|
Inter-Agency Standing Committee
|
ICC
|
International Criminal Court
|
ICG
|
International Crisis Group
|
ICGLR
|
International Conference on the Great Lakes Region
|
ICISS
|
International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty
|
ICRC
|
International Committee of the Red Cross
|
ICTR
|
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda
|
ICTY
|
International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia
|
IDP
|
internally displaced person
|
IEMF
|
Interim Emergency Multinational Force
|
IHL
|
international humanitarian law
|
IHO
|
international humanitarian organization
|
IRC
|
International Rescue Committee
|
JEM
|
Justice and Equality Movement
|
LDU
|
local defense unit
|
LJM
|
Liberation and Justice Movement
|
LRA
|
Lord’s Resistance Army
|
M23
|
Mouvement du 23 Mars
|
MLC
|
Mouvement de Libération du Congo
|
MONUC
|
UN Organization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
|
MONUSCO
|
UN Organization Stabilization Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
|
MSF
|
Médecins sans Frontières
|
NATO
|
North Atlantic Treaty Organization
|
NGO
|
nongovernmental organization
|
NMRD
|
National Movement for Reform and Development
|
NRA
|
National Resistance Army
|
NRM
|
National Resistance Movement
|
OAU
|
Organization of African Unity
|
OCHA
|
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Assistance
|
OTP
|
Office of the Prosecutor
|
P5
|
permanent members of UN Security Council
|
PoC
|
protection of civilians
|
PSC
|
Peace and Security Council
|
R2P
|
Responsibility to Protect
|
R2P3
|
responsibility to protect, prosecute and palliate
|
RCD
|
Rassemblement Congolais pour la Démocratie
|
RCD-G
|
Rassemblement Congolais pour la Démocratie-Goma
|
RPA
|
Rwandan Patriotic Army
|
RPF
|
Rwandan Patriotic Front
|
SADC
|
Southern African Development Community
|
SLA
|
Sudan Liberation Army
|
SPLA
|
Sudan People’s Liberation Army
|
STAREC
|
Stabilization and Reconstruction Plan for Eastern DRC
|
UDHR
|
Universal Declaration of Human Rights
|
UNAMID
|
UN Mission in Darfur
|
UNAMIR
|
UN Mission in Rwanda
|
UNAMSIL
|
UN Mission in Sierra Leone
|
UNGA
|
UN General Assembly
|
UNHCHR
|
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
|
UNHCR
|
UN High Commissioner for Refugees
|
UNHRC
|
UN Human Rights Council
|
UNLA
|
Ugandan National Liberation Army
|
UNMIS
|
UN Mission in Sudan
|
UNPROFOR
|
UN Protection Force
|
UNSC
|
UN Security Council
|
UPC
|
Union des Patriotes Congolais
|
UPDA
|
Ugandan People’s Democratic Army
|
UPDF
|
Ugandan People’s Defence Force
|
URF
|
United Resistance Front
|
USAID
|
United States Agency for International Development
|
WFP
|
World Food Program
|
ZCSC
|
Zairian Camp Security Contingent
|
Introduction
Responding to Mass Atrocities
The core concern of this book is how have, can, and should mass atrocities be addressed? It is thus historical, analytical, and normative. It is historical because it examines how the international community responded to four cases of mass atrocities, although three of these situations are, in one way or another, still ongoing. It is analytical in that it provides a typology of the different types of responses and how these responses interact. It is normative because it begins with the underlying assumption that the international community should “do something” about mass atrocity situations, and that the “somethings”—military intervention to stop atrocities, holding individuals criminally responsible for atrocities, and providing basic assistance to help people survive