Gwynne Dyer is a freelance journalist, columnist, broadcaster, and lecturer, originally trained as a historian. He has served in the armed forces of three nations and has held appointments to the Royal Military College, Sandhurst and Oxford 카지노게임사이트. He writes a twice-weekly column that is published in several languages by approximately 175 papers in 45 countries.
In his lecture, Dyer outlined a new attitude toward using force in the world in defense of justice for Canada: 카지노 게임 컬렉션with the UN if possible, but not necessarily with the UN.카지노 게임 컬렉션 He then traced two genealogies of this willingness to spurn the UN and join what he called a 카지노 게임 컬렉션posse of international vigilantes.카지노 게임 컬렉션 First, after the emergence of humanitarian intervention in the post-Cold War world, as citizens of industrialized countries came to see human suffering in a new light, and demand that their governments take action. The willingness to intervene grew after a post-hoc UN resolution made NATO카지노 게임 컬렉션s intervention in Kosovo legal. Second, after World War II, fear of a recurrence motivated an international agreement that borders were sacred and absolute. Only later did the Convention on Genocide create a legal obligation for states to intervene to stop genocide. As the world gradually moved towards a world centred on human rights law in addition to international law, the approach to absolute borders would have to be reformulated to protect citizens against tyranny: 카지노 게임 컬렉션what we are trying to do is move from a world where international law protects governments to a world where international law protects people, and that includes protecting people from governments.카지노 게임 컬렉션
Dyer카지노 게임 컬렉션s lecture was held on October 3, 1999.
