International Law

Academic Module

Academic Module: Darfur and Beyond: What Is Needed to Prevent Mass Atrocities

Author: Lee Feinstein

This module features teaching notes by former CFR senior fellow Lee Feinstein, the author of Darfur and Beyond, along with other resources to supplement the text. In the report, Feinstein argues that the new UN secretary-general should take the General Assembly's endorsement of responsibility to protect as a mandate and outlines steps the United States and others must follow to bolster UN action. 

See more in Sub-Saharan Africa, International Law, International Peace and Security

Interview

Yacoubian: Linkages between Special UN Tribunal, Lebanon, and Syria

Mona Yacoubian interviewed by Bernard Gwertzman

Mona Yacoubian, a former intelligence analyst for the State Department, says the special UN tribunal to investigate the assassination in 2005 of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri is linked to the politics of Lebanon and Syria, with the Syrians trying to sow enough chaos to prevent the tribunal from ever getting underway.

See more in Lebanon, Syria, International Law

News Release

New Multimedia, Interactive Crisis Guide on Darfur

CFR.org’s latest Crisis Guide examines the tragedy in Sudan’s Darfur region. Introduced through a compelling multimedia essay comprised of original and some never-before-seen footage from seven of the world’s leading photojournalists, Crisis Guide: Darfur depicts the human, political, military, and historical realities in the region, and provides links to deeper resources from the Council’s think tank and other organizations around the world.

See more in Sudan, Democracy and Human Rights, International Crime, International Law, UN

Must Read

AI: USA: Who are the Guantánamo detainees?

Number 21 in Amnesty International’s case sheets on the individual detainees at Guantanomo Bay, Cuba. This case concerns Sudanese national Adel Hamad who was taken at gunpoint from his home in Peshawar, Pakistan on 18 July 2002. Pakistani agents, led by a US agent, took him to a Pakistani prison where he was held for six and a half months before being transferred to Guantanamo Bay via Afghanistan.

See more in United States, International Law