Identity in crisis : the politics of humanitarian intervention
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Date
2010Author
Ward, Matthew R.
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Abstract
This thesis examines the theory and practice of humanitarian intervention in the early post-Cold War era. Taking as its basis US policy towards Somalia, Rwanda and Haiti between
1992 and 1994, it develops a theory of humanitarian intervention based on constructivist
and scientific realist principles. Using identity as the organising concept, the thesis
examines the meta-theoretical precepts of constructivism and scientific realism, which are
developed into a methodology for analysing questions of foreign policy. Incorporating
critical insights from sequential path analysis, morphogenetic social analysis - the notion
of a dynamic mutual constitution of structure and agency - and constructivist social theory,
the case studies provide a useful new means of conceptualising humanitarian intervention
as a foreign policy practice through an identity-driven analysis. The findings of the
research shed much light on this practice and its future prospects. They also suggest new
directions for a scientific realist/constructivist research agenda.