1. See Lori F. Damrosch, ‘Changing conceptions of intervention in International Law’, in Reed and Kaysen, 1993, p. 92, and R.J. Vincent and Peter Wilson, ‘Beyond non-intervention’, in Forbes and Hoffman (eds), 1993, pp. 122–30.
2. Nick Lewer and Oliver Ramsbotham, ‘Something must be done’: Towards an Ethical Framework for Humanitarian Intervention in International Social Conflict, Peace Research Reports 33, Dept. of Peace Studies, University of Bradford, August 1993, pp. 25–9. Also see Barbara Harff, ‘Humanitarian intervention in genocidal situations’, in Israel W. Charny (ed.), Genocide: A Critical Bibliographic Review, Mansell Publishing Ltd, London, 1991, pp. 146–53.
3. Richard N. Haass, Intervention: The Use of American Military Force in the post-Cold War World, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, Washington DC. 1994. PP. 62. 63 and 99.
4. Thomas P. Sheehy, ‘No more Somalias: Reconsidering Clinton’s doctrine of military humanitarianism’, The Heritage Foundation Backgrounder, No. 968, 20 December 1993, p. 3.
5. M. Mokammel Haque, ‘Operation Sea Angel’, in Hameeda Hossain et al., (eds), From Crisis to Development: Coping with Disasters in Bangladesh, University Press, Dhaka, 1992, pp. 93-8, and Michael J. Mazarr, ‘The military dilemmas of humanitarian intervention’, Security Dialogue, Vol. 24(2), June 1993, p. 152.