On 28th November OxTalks will move to the new Halo platform and will become 'Oxford Events' (full details are available on the Staff Gateway).
There will be an OxTalks freeze beginning on Friday 14th November. This means you will need to publish any of your known events to OxTalks by then as there will be no facility to publish or edit events in that fortnight. During the freeze, all events will be migrated to the new Oxford Events site. It will still be possible to view events on OxTalks during this time.
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The practice of humanitarian intervention – that is to say, of military intervention in the internal affairs of a sovereign state to stop the mass atrocities and the violation of humanitarian norms – is commonly situated within the international politics of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Yet recent scholarship has identified the roots of humanitarian intervention in the nineteenth century. In this context, the practice of enforcing the abolition of the slave trade is pivotal, because it established the concept of humanitarian intervention as a recognized instrument in international politics. Cloosely intertwined with imperial and colonial projects, enforcing abolition however shaped also more general legal debates of when and how “civilized” states should intervene in a humanitarian crisis. Insofar these debates went far beyond the sole issue of intervening militarily against the slave trade, but significantly connected and shaped various fields of nineteenth century humanitarianism.