Overview: the role of business in R2P John Forrer and Conor Seyle; Introduction: the private sector, the United Nations, and the Responsibility to Protect Edward Luck; 1. Selling R2P: time for action Victor MacDiarmid and Tina Park; 2. Why not business? Tim Fort and Michelle Westermann-Behaylo; 3. Responsibility to protect trumps business as usual: how corporate leaders build heroism to face atrocities Alain Lemperuer and Rebecca Herrington; 4. The Responsibility to Protect, Inc. Jonas Claes; 5. The Kenyan private sector's role in mass atrocity prevention, cessation and recovery Patrick Obath and Victor Owuor; 6. R2P and the extractive industries Jill Shankleman; 7. Information technology, private actors, and the Responsibility to Protect Kirsten Martin; 8. Corporate responsibility to protect populations from mass atrocities Vesselin Popovski; 9. The private sector and atrocities prevention Alex Bellamy; 10. The way forward: discovering the shared interests between business and R2P John Forrer and Conor Seyle.
The book provides a thorough analysis of how the private sector can play a role in the Responsibility to Protect.
John J. Forrer is Director of the Institute of Corporate Responsibility, Associate Research Professor of Strategic Management and Public Policy, and Associate Faculty at George Washington University, Washington DC. He has researched, taught, and written on cross-sector collaborations and public-private partnerships for fifteen years, in particular emphasizing the role the private-sector can play in advancing public policy goals. Other research areas focus on business and peace, global governance and sustainable global supply chains. He has co-authored books on economic sanctions and cross-sector collaboration and published more than twenty book chapters and journal articles. Conor Seyle is Deputy Director of Research and Development at the One Earth Future Foundation, an international research and operating foundation focused on supporting good global governance in the interest of peace. He is a political psychologist with research interests in international governance, deliberative democracy, and the long-term impact of violence and traumatic events. He is the author or co-author of more than twenty-six academic and NGO publications.
'In the past, predatory business practices have sometimes enabled
crimes against humanity. This book identifies how some businesses
have profited from human misery while also providing welcome
examples of how the private sector can play a crucial role in
undermining the politics of the machete and the mass grave. In
doing so, this book broadens our understanding of the international
community, of our collective responsibility to protect, and of how
the private sector - whose wealth, resources and capacity can
easily exceed those of failing or fragile states - can play a vital
role in the prevention of mass atrocities.' Simon Adams, Global
Centre for the Responsibility to Protect, The Graduate Center, City
University of New York
'That business can be an instrument in building peace has now been
firmly recognized. Including the business sector in the
Responsibility to Protect (R2P) debate seems only natural, having
in mind the capacity of the business community to influence
societal attitudes and structures. In this new book professor John
Forrer and Conor Seyle make an important effort in putting this
agenda forward.' Per L. Saxegaard, Founder and Chairman, Business
for Peace Foundation
'The private sector is an increasingly influential actor in global
governance - the network of arrangements that ensure order,
stability and predictability even in the absence of world
government. Business can sustain and profiteer from group violence.
But it also has important roles to play before, in and after armed
conflicts in underwriting peace, stability and prosperity as the
pathway to sustainable profits. One important role is to partner
with other key actors in implementing the responsibility to protect
populations at risk of mass atrocities. This invaluable collection
of essays by leading experts systematically explains why, how and
with what prospects.' Ramesh Thakur, Australian National
University, Canberra, International Commission on Intervention and
State Sovereignty (ICISS) Commissioner and Editor-in-Chief, Global
Governance
'This volume fills an important lacuna in the literature on how
business relates to the responsibility to protect. The contributing
authors offer practical and theoretical insights and examples that
will be of interest to many on the ways the private sector can
support (or undermine) the goals of the responsibility to protect.'
Abi Williams, President, The Hague Institute for Global Justice
'This book, with its focus on how business actors may contribute to
the global Responsibility to Protect Agenda (R2P), pioneers a whole
new agenda for research and policy formulation. In the process, the
authors challenge our standard conceptions of both business and
R2P.' Kristian Berg Harpviken, Director, Peace Research Institute
Oslo (PRIO)
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