International Development Research Centre (IDRC) Canada     
idrc.ca HOME > News/events > News >
 Topic Explorer  
International Development Research Centre
     About IDRC
     Programming
     News/events
       News
     Funding & awards
     Governance & Board
     Evaluation
     Partnerships
     Publications
     Library
     IDRC's regional offices
     Career Opportunities
     Contact us

IDRC in the world
Subscribe
Free Online Books
IDRC Explore Magazine
 People
IDRC Communications

ID: 120847
Added: 2008-02-20 11:22
Modified: 2008-02-28 19:17
Refreshed: 2009-01-02 10:14

Click here to get the URL for the RSS format file RSS format file


Prev News 29 of 153 Next

IDRC Governor to Helm New Centre Fighting Mass Atrocities

IDRC Book:

The Responsibility to Protect: Report of the International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty


Subscribe to IDRC Bulletin


knight.jpg
2008-02

IDRC governor Andrew Knight has been named executive director of the new Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect.

Based in Manhattan (New York, USA), the independent research and advocacy body is dedicated to ensuring effective global responses to genocide, ethnic cleansing, crimes against humanity, and war crimes.

Launched at the United Nations headquarters in New York in February, the centre will serve as an information clearinghouse and resource for governments, international institutions, and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) fighting mass atrocities.

The idea for the centre grew out of the groundbreaking Responsibility to Protect principle, which states that if countries fail to protect their own people, other countries have the moral responsibility to intervene, even if it means using military force. The concept was adopted unanimously by government heads at the 2005 World Summit.

The centre will generate research, conduct high-level advocacy efforts, and support the activities of both governments and NGOs around the world working to advance and implement the Responsibility to Protect principle.

Knight has had a distinguished academic career, and is currently a professor of political science at the University of Alberta in Edmonton, Canada. He will join the centre full time in July.

Inaugural patrons of the center include Canadians Lloyd Axworthy, Canada’s former Minister of Foreign Affairs, and Senator Romeo Dallaire, who headed the ill-fated United Nations peacekeeping force for Rwanda between 1993 and 1994 during the Rwanda genocide. Former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, Jordan’s Prince El Hassan bin Talal, and Archbishop Desmond Tutu will also serve as patrons.



Top of Page

Prev News 29 of 153 Next



   guest (Read)(Ottawa)   Login Home|Jobs|Copyright and Terms of Use|General Infomation|Contact Us|Low bandwidth

Latin America Middle East And North Africa Sub-Saharan Africa Asia IDRC in the world