Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-pftt2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-21T08:25:01.885Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 November 2021

Fabian Klose
Affiliation:
Universität zu Köln
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
In the Cause of Humanity
A History of Humanitarian Intervention in the Long Nineteenth Century
, pp. 389 - 454
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Primary Sources

Secondary Sources

Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), The Debate on a Motion for the Abolition of the Slave-Trade, in: the House of Commons on Monday and Tuesday, April 18 and 19, 1791, London 1791.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Substance of the Debates on a Resolution for Abolishing the Slave Trade, which was moved in the House of Commons on the 10th June, 1806, and in the House of Lords, on the 24th June, 1806, London 1806.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Report from the Select Committee of the House of Lords, Appointed to Consider the best Means which Great Britain can adopt for the final Extinction of the African Slave Trade; and to Report thereon to the House; together with the Minutes of Evidence, 15 July 1850, London 1850.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Papers Relative to the Reduction of Lagos by Her Majesty’s Forces on the West Coast of Africa, London 1852.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Report from the Select Committee on Slave Trade (East Coast of Africa); together with the Proceedings of the Committee, Minutes of Evidence, Appendix and Index, 4 August 1871, London 1871.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Despatches Addressed by Dr. Livingstone, Her Majesty’s Consul, Inner Africa, to Her Majesty’s Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, in 1870, 1871, and 1872, London 1872.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Correspondence Respecting Sir Bartle Frere’s Mission to the East Coast of Africa, 1872–73, London 1873.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Correspondence with British Representatives and Agents, and Reports from Naval Officers, Related to the East African Slave Trade, From January 1 to December 31, 1873, London 1874.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Communications from Dr. Kirk, Respecting the Suppression of the Land Slave Traffic in the Dominions of the Sultan of Zanzibar, London 1876.Google Scholar
Cobbett, William (ed.), The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, Parliamentary Debates, vol. 27: 14 February 1788 to 4 May 1789, London 1816.Google Scholar
Cobbett, William (ed.), The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, Parliamentary Debates, vol. 28: 9 May 1789 to 15 March 1791, London 1816.Google Scholar
Cobbett, William (ed.), The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, Parliamentary Debates, vol. 29: 22 March 1791 to 13 December 1792, London 1817.Google Scholar
Cobbett, William (ed.), The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, Parliamentary Debates, vol. 30: 13 December 1792 to 10 March 1794, London 1817.Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 5, New Series, London 1822 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 6, London 1806 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 7, London 1812 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 27, London 1814 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 28, London 1814 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 30, London 1815 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 34, London 1816 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 35, London 1817 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 36, London 1817.Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 50, London 1839 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 65, London 1842 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 81, London 1842 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 109, London 1850 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Her Majesty’s Stationery Office (ed.), Supplement to the Slave Trade Instructions, vol. I: Treaty Engagements with States other than Uncivilized African States, London 1865.Google Scholar
Her Majesty’s Stationery Office (ed.), Supplement to the Slave Trade Instructions, vol. II: Engagements with Uncivilized African States, London 1865.Google Scholar
Her Majesty’s Stationery Office (ed.), Slave Trade Instructions, being Instructions for the Guidance of the Commanders of Her Majesty’s Ships of War employed in the Suppression of the Slave Trade, London 1865.Google Scholar
African Institution (ed.), Abstract of the Acts of Parliament for Abolishing the Slave trade, and of the Orders in Council Founded on Them, London 1810.Google Scholar
African Institution (ed.), Report of the Committee of the African Institution, Read to the General Meeting on the 15th July 1807, Together with the Rules and Regulations which were then adopted for the Government of the Society, London 1807.Google Scholar
African Institution (ed.), Fourth Report of the Directors of the African Institution, Read at the Annual General Meeting on 23rdh of March, 1810, London 1810.Google Scholar
African Institution (ed.), Fifth Report of the Directors of the African Institution, Read at the Annual General Meeting on 27th of March, 1811, London 1811.Google Scholar
African Institution (ed.), Sixth Report of the Directors of the African Institution, Read at the Annual General Meeting on 25th of March, 1812, London 1812.Google Scholar
Ministère des Affaires Étrangères (ed.), Documents Diplomatiques 1861, Paris 1862.Google Scholar
Ministère des Affaires Étrangères (ed.), Documents Diplomatiques. Affaires d’Orient. 1875–1876–1877, Paris 1877.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, House of Representative, 12th Congress, 1st Session.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, House of Representatives, 17th Congress, 2nd Session.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, House of Representatives, 18th Congress, 1st Session.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, Senate, 18th Congress, 1st Session.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, Senate, 20th Congress, 1st Session.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, Senate, 20th Congress, 2nd Session.Google Scholar
Government Printing Office (ed.), Spanish Diplomatic Correspondence and Documents 1896– 1900 Presented to the Cortes by the Minister of State, Washington 1905.Google Scholar
Government Printing Office (ed.), Treaties, Conventions, International Acts, Protocols and Agreements Between the United States of America and Other Powers, 1776–1909, pt. II, vol. II, New York 1968.Google Scholar
United States, Dept. of State, Message from the President of the United States Transmitting the Correspondence between the Government of the United States and Great Britain Relating to the Negotiation of the Convention of 20th October 1818, Washington, 1823.Google Scholar
Lord Aberdeen to Mr. Everett, 20 December 1841, in: H.Doc. No. 192, 27th Congress, 3rd Session.Google Scholar
Message from the President of the United States, In compliance with a resolution of the Senate, on the subject of the communication of the Quintupel treaty to the Government of the United States, 9 January 1843, in: S.Doc. No. 52, 27th Congress, 3rd Session.Google Scholar
Message from the President of the United States Transmitting a Report from the Secretary of State, in answer to the Resolution of the House of Representatives, 27 February 1843, in: H.Doc. No. 192, 27th Congress, 3rd Session.Google Scholar
Message of the President of the United States, Communicated to the Two Houses of Congress, on the Relations of the United States to Spain by Reason of Warfare in the Island of Cuba, 11 April 1898, in: H.Doc.No. 405, 55th Congress, 2nd Session.Google Scholar
Report of the Committee of Foreign Relations, United States Senate, Relative to Affairs in Cuba, 13 April 1898, in: S.rp.885, 55th Congress, 2nd Session.Google Scholar
Treaty between the United States of America and Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, for the Suppression of the African Slave Trade, 7 April 1862, in: S.Ex.Doc. No. 57, 37th Congress, 2nd Session.Google Scholar
United Nations (ed.), Resolution 2131 (XX), Declaration on the Inadmissibility of Intervention in the Domestic Affairs of States and the Protection of Their Independence and Sovereignty, 21 December 1965, UNGA A/RES/20/2131.Google Scholar
(ed.), Agenda for Peace. Preventing Diplomacy, Peacemaking, and Peace-keeping, 17 June 1992, UNGA A/47/277.Google Scholar
(ed.), Report of the Secretary-General Pursuant to General Assembly Resolution 53/35. The Fall of Srebrenica, 15 November 1999, UNGA A/54/549.Google Scholar
(ed.), Report of the Independent Inquiry into the Actions of the United Nations during the 1994 Genocide in Rwanda, 16 December 1999, UNSC S/1999/1257.Google Scholar
(ed.), Prevention of Armed Conflict. Report of the Secretary-General on the Work of the Organization, 7 June 2001, UNGA A/55/985 – S/2001/574.Google Scholar
(ed.), Resolution 60/1, 2005 World Summit Outcome, 24 October 2005, UNGA A/RES/60/1.Google Scholar
(ed.), Resolution 1970 (2011), 26 February 2011, UNSC S/RES/1970.Google Scholar
(ed.), Resolution 1973 (2011), 17 March 2011, UNSC S/RES/1973.Google Scholar
Argenti, Philip P. (ed.), The Massacres of Chios: Described in Contemporary Diplomatic Reports, London 1932.Google Scholar
Dallek, Robert (ed.), 1898: McKinley’s Decision: The United States Declares War on Spain, New York 1969.Google Scholar
Dickins, Ashbury/Allen, James C. (eds.), American State Papers: Documents, Legislative and Executive of the Congress of the United States, vol. 5, Washington, DC 1858.Google Scholar
Doubleday, & McClure, (ed.), Speeches and Addresses of William McKinley, From March 1, 1897 to May 30, 1900, New York 1900.Google Scholar
Gatter, Frank Thomas (ed.), Protokolle und Generalakte der Berliner Afrika-Konferenz 1884–1885, Bremen 1984.Google Scholar
Geiss, Imanuel (ed.), Der Berliner Kongreß 1878: Protokolle und Materialen, Boppard 1978.Google Scholar
Grewe, Wilhelm G. (ed.), Fontes Historiae Iuris Gentium, vol. 3/1, 1815–1945, Berlin 1992.Google Scholar
Harrison, T. R. (ed.), Treaties, Conventions and Engagements, for the Suppression of the Slave Trade, London 1844.Google Scholar
Hertslet, Edward (ed.), A Complete Collection of the Treaties and Conventions at Present Subsisting between Great Britain and Foreign Powers, vol. 1, London 1820.Google Scholar
Hertslet, Edward A Complete Collection of the Treaties and Conventions, and Reciprocal Regulations at Present Subsisting between Great Britain and Foreign Powers, vol. 3, London 1841.Google Scholar
Hertslet, Edward A Complete Collection of the Treaties and Conventions, and Reciprocal Regulations at Present Subsisting between Great Britain and Foreign Powers, vol. 5, London 1840.Google Scholar
Hertslet, Edward The Map of Europe by Treaty; Showing the Various Political and Territorial Changes Which Have Taken Place since the General Peace of 1814, vol. IV, 1875 to 1891, London 1891.Google Scholar
Klüber, Johann Ludwig (ed.), Acten des Wiener Congresses in den Jahren 1814 und 1815, vol. 8, Erlangen 1818.Google Scholar
LaFeber, Walter (ed.), John Quincy Adams and American Continental Empire: Letters, Papers, and Speeches, Chicago, IL 1965.Google Scholar
Lane-Poole, Stanley (ed.), The Life of the Right Honourable Stratford Canning: From His Memoirs and Private and Official Papers, vol. 1, London 1888.Google Scholar
Miller, Hunter (ed.), Treaties and Other International Acts of the United States of America, vol. 2: 1976–1818, Washington, DC 1931.Google Scholar
Newbury, C. W. (ed.), British Policy towards West Africa: Select Documents 1786–1874, Oxford 1965.Google Scholar
Richardson, James D. (ed.), A Compilation of the Messages and Papers of the Presidents, 1789–1897, vol. IV, Washington, DC 1899.Google Scholar
Vane, Charles (ed.), Correspondence, Despatches and Other Papers of Viscount Castlereagh, vol. 11, London 1853.Google Scholar
Wellington, Arthur Wellesley of (ed.), Despatches, Correspondence, and Memoranda of Field Marshal Arthur Duke of Wellington, vol. 1, London 1867.Google Scholar
Wellington, Arthur Wellesley of (ed.), Supplementary Despatches, Correspondence, and Memoranda of Field Marshal Arthur Duke of Wellington, vol. 2, London 1867.Google Scholar
Wellington, Arthur Wellesley of (ed.), Supplementary Despatches, Correspondence, and Memoranda of Field Marshal Arthur Duke of Wellington, vol. 3, London 1868.Google Scholar
Wellington, Arthur Wellesley of (ed.), Supplementary Despatches, Correspondence, and Memoranda of Field Marshal Arthur Duke of Wellington, vol. 9, London 1862.Google Scholar
Wellington, Arthur Wellesley of (ed.), Supplementary Despatches, Correspondence, and Memoranda of Field Marshal Arthur Duke of Wellington, vol. 10, London 1863.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), The Debate on a Motion for the Abolition of the Slave-Trade, in: the House of Commons on Monday and Tuesday, April 18 and 19, 1791, London 1791.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Substance of the Debates on a Resolution for Abolishing the Slave Trade, which was moved in the House of Commons on the 10th June, 1806, and in the House of Lords, on the 24th June, 1806, London 1806.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Report from the Select Committee of the House of Lords, Appointed to Consider the best Means which Great Britain can adopt for the final Extinction of the African Slave Trade; and to Report thereon to the House; together with the Minutes of Evidence, 15 July 1850, London 1850.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Papers Relative to the Reduction of Lagos by Her Majesty’s Forces on the West Coast of Africa, London 1852.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Report from the Select Committee on Slave Trade (East Coast of Africa); together with the Proceedings of the Committee, Minutes of Evidence, Appendix and Index, 4 August 1871, London 1871.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Despatches Addressed by Dr. Livingstone, Her Majesty’s Consul, Inner Africa, to Her Majesty’s Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, in 1870, 1871, and 1872, London 1872.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Correspondence Respecting Sir Bartle Frere’s Mission to the East Coast of Africa, 1872–73, London 1873.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Correspondence with British Representatives and Agents, and Reports from Naval Officers, Related to the East African Slave Trade, From January 1 to December 31, 1873, London 1874.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Communications from Dr. Kirk, Respecting the Suppression of the Land Slave Traffic in the Dominions of the Sultan of Zanzibar, London 1876.Google Scholar
Cobbett, William (ed.), The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, Parliamentary Debates, vol. 27: 14 February 1788 to 4 May 1789, London 1816.Google Scholar
Cobbett, William (ed.), The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, Parliamentary Debates, vol. 28: 9 May 1789 to 15 March 1791, London 1816.Google Scholar
Cobbett, William (ed.), The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, Parliamentary Debates, vol. 29: 22 March 1791 to 13 December 1792, London 1817.Google Scholar
Cobbett, William (ed.), The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, Parliamentary Debates, vol. 30: 13 December 1792 to 10 March 1794, London 1817.Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 5, New Series, London 1822 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 6, London 1806 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 7, London 1812 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 27, London 1814 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 28, London 1814 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 30, London 1815 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 34, London 1816 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 35, London 1817 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 36, London 1817.Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 50, London 1839 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 65, London 1842 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 81, London 1842 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 109, London 1850 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Her Majesty’s Stationery Office (ed.), Supplement to the Slave Trade Instructions, vol. I: Treaty Engagements with States other than Uncivilized African States, London 1865.Google Scholar
Her Majesty’s Stationery Office (ed.), Supplement to the Slave Trade Instructions, vol. II: Engagements with Uncivilized African States, London 1865.Google Scholar
Her Majesty’s Stationery Office (ed.), Slave Trade Instructions, being Instructions for the Guidance of the Commanders of Her Majesty’s Ships of War employed in the Suppression of the Slave Trade, London 1865.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), The Debate on a Motion for the Abolition of the Slave-Trade, in: the House of Commons on Monday and Tuesday, April 18 and 19, 1791, London 1791.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Substance of the Debates on a Resolution for Abolishing the Slave Trade, which was moved in the House of Commons on the 10th June, 1806, and in the House of Lords, on the 24th June, 1806, London 1806.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Report from the Select Committee of the House of Lords, Appointed to Consider the best Means which Great Britain can adopt for the final Extinction of the African Slave Trade; and to Report thereon to the House; together with the Minutes of Evidence, 15 July 1850, London 1850.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Papers Relative to the Reduction of Lagos by Her Majesty’s Forces on the West Coast of Africa, London 1852.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Report from the Select Committee on Slave Trade (East Coast of Africa); together with the Proceedings of the Committee, Minutes of Evidence, Appendix and Index, 4 August 1871, London 1871.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Despatches Addressed by Dr. Livingstone, Her Majesty’s Consul, Inner Africa, to Her Majesty’s Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs, in 1870, 1871, and 1872, London 1872.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Correspondence Respecting Sir Bartle Frere’s Mission to the East Coast of Africa, 1872–73, London 1873.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Correspondence with British Representatives and Agents, and Reports from Naval Officers, Related to the East African Slave Trade, From January 1 to December 31, 1873, London 1874.Google Scholar
Great Britain, Parliament, House of Commons (ed.), Communications from Dr. Kirk, Respecting the Suppression of the Land Slave Traffic in the Dominions of the Sultan of Zanzibar, London 1876.Google Scholar
Cobbett, William (ed.), The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, Parliamentary Debates, vol. 27: 14 February 1788 to 4 May 1789, London 1816.Google Scholar
Cobbett, William (ed.), The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, Parliamentary Debates, vol. 28: 9 May 1789 to 15 March 1791, London 1816.Google Scholar
Cobbett, William (ed.), The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, Parliamentary Debates, vol. 29: 22 March 1791 to 13 December 1792, London 1817.Google Scholar
Cobbett, William (ed.), The Parliamentary History of England from the Earliest Period to the Year 1803, Parliamentary Debates, vol. 30: 13 December 1792 to 10 March 1794, London 1817.Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 5, New Series, London 1822 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 6, London 1806 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 7, London 1812 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 27, London 1814 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 28, London 1814 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 30, London 1815 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 34, London 1816 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 35, London 1817 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 36, London 1817.Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 50, London 1839 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 65, London 1842 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 81, London 1842 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Hansard, T. C. (ed.), The Parliamentary Debates from the Year 1803 to the Present Time, vol. 109, London 1850 (New York 1970).Google Scholar
Her Majesty’s Stationery Office (ed.), Supplement to the Slave Trade Instructions, vol. I: Treaty Engagements with States other than Uncivilized African States, London 1865.Google Scholar
Her Majesty’s Stationery Office (ed.), Supplement to the Slave Trade Instructions, vol. II: Engagements with Uncivilized African States, London 1865.Google Scholar
Her Majesty’s Stationery Office (ed.), Slave Trade Instructions, being Instructions for the Guidance of the Commanders of Her Majesty’s Ships of War employed in the Suppression of the Slave Trade, London 1865.Google Scholar
African Institution (ed.), Abstract of the Acts of Parliament for Abolishing the Slave trade, and of the Orders in Council Founded on Them, London 1810.Google Scholar
African Institution (ed.), Report of the Committee of the African Institution, Read to the General Meeting on the 15th July 1807, Together with the Rules and Regulations which were then adopted for the Government of the Society, London 1807.Google Scholar
African Institution (ed.), Fourth Report of the Directors of the African Institution, Read at the Annual General Meeting on 23rdh of March, 1810, London 1810.Google Scholar
African Institution (ed.), Fifth Report of the Directors of the African Institution, Read at the Annual General Meeting on 27th of March, 1811, London 1811.Google Scholar
African Institution (ed.), Sixth Report of the Directors of the African Institution, Read at the Annual General Meeting on 25th of March, 1812, London 1812.Google Scholar
Ministère des Affaires Étrangères (ed.), Documents Diplomatiques 1861, Paris 1862.Google Scholar
Ministère des Affaires Étrangères (ed.), Documents Diplomatiques. Affaires d’Orient. 1875–1876–1877, Paris 1877.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, House of Representative, 12th Congress, 1st Session.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, House of Representatives, 17th Congress, 2nd Session.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, House of Representatives, 18th Congress, 1st Session.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, Senate, 18th Congress, 1st Session.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, Senate, 20th Congress, 1st Session.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, Senate, 20th Congress, 2nd Session.Google Scholar
Government Printing Office (ed.), Spanish Diplomatic Correspondence and Documents 1896– 1900 Presented to the Cortes by the Minister of State, Washington 1905.Google Scholar
Government Printing Office (ed.), Treaties, Conventions, International Acts, Protocols and Agreements Between the United States of America and Other Powers, 1776–1909, pt. II, vol. II, New York 1968.Google Scholar
United States, Dept. of State, Message from the President of the United States Transmitting the Correspondence between the Government of the United States and Great Britain Relating to the Negotiation of the Convention of 20th October 1818, Washington, 1823.Google Scholar
Lord Aberdeen to Mr. Everett, 20 December 1841, in: H.Doc. No. 192, 27th Congress, 3rd Session.Google Scholar
Message from the President of the United States, In compliance with a resolution of the Senate, on the subject of the communication of the Quintupel treaty to the Government of the United States, 9 January 1843, in: S.Doc. No. 52, 27th Congress, 3rd Session.Google Scholar
Message from the President of the United States Transmitting a Report from the Secretary of State, in answer to the Resolution of the House of Representatives, 27 February 1843, in: H.Doc. No. 192, 27th Congress, 3rd Session.Google Scholar
Message of the President of the United States, Communicated to the Two Houses of Congress, on the Relations of the United States to Spain by Reason of Warfare in the Island of Cuba, 11 April 1898, in: H.Doc.No. 405, 55th Congress, 2nd Session.Google Scholar
Report of the Committee of Foreign Relations, United States Senate, Relative to Affairs in Cuba, 13 April 1898, in: S.rp.885, 55th Congress, 2nd Session.Google Scholar
Treaty between the United States of America and Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, for the Suppression of the African Slave Trade, 7 April 1862, in: S.Ex.Doc. No. 57, 37th Congress, 2nd Session.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, House of Representative, 12th Congress, 1st Session.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, House of Representatives, 17th Congress, 2nd Session.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, House of Representatives, 18th Congress, 1st Session.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, Senate, 18th Congress, 1st Session.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, Senate, 20th Congress, 1st Session.Google Scholar
Annals of Congress, Senate, 20th Congress, 2nd Session.Google Scholar
Government Printing Office (ed.), Spanish Diplomatic Correspondence and Documents 1896– 1900 Presented to the Cortes by the Minister of State, Washington 1905.Google Scholar
Government Printing Office (ed.), Treaties, Conventions, International Acts, Protocols and Agreements Between the United States of America and Other Powers, 1776–1909, pt. II, vol. II, New York 1968.Google Scholar
United States, Dept. of State, Message from the President of the United States Transmitting the Correspondence between the Government of the United States and Great Britain Relating to the Negotiation of the Convention of 20th October 1818, Washington, 1823.Google Scholar
Lord Aberdeen to Mr. Everett, 20 December 1841, in: H.Doc. No. 192, 27th Congress, 3rd Session.Google Scholar
Message from the President of the United States, In compliance with a resolution of the Senate, on the subject of the communication of the Quintupel treaty to the Government of the United States, 9 January 1843, in: S.Doc. No. 52, 27th Congress, 3rd Session.Google Scholar
Message from the President of the United States Transmitting a Report from the Secretary of State, in answer to the Resolution of the House of Representatives, 27 February 1843, in: H.Doc. No. 192, 27th Congress, 3rd Session.Google Scholar
Message of the President of the United States, Communicated to the Two Houses of Congress, on the Relations of the United States to Spain by Reason of Warfare in the Island of Cuba, 11 April 1898, in: H.Doc.No. 405, 55th Congress, 2nd Session.Google Scholar
Report of the Committee of Foreign Relations, United States Senate, Relative to Affairs in Cuba, 13 April 1898, in: S.rp.885, 55th Congress, 2nd Session.Google Scholar
Treaty between the United States of America and Her Majesty the Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, for the Suppression of the African Slave Trade, 7 April 1862, in: S.Ex.Doc. No. 57, 37th Congress, 2nd Session.Google Scholar
United Nations (ed.), Resolution 2131 (XX), Declaration on the Inadmissibility of Intervention in the Domestic Affairs of States and the Protection of Their Independence and Sovereignty, 21 December 1965, UNGA A/RES/20/2131.Google Scholar
(ed.), Agenda for Peace. Preventing Diplomacy, Peacemaking, and Peace-keeping, 17 June 1992, UNGA A/47/277.Google Scholar
(ed.), Report of the Secretary-General Pursuant to General Assembly Resolution 53/35. The Fall of Srebrenica, 15 November 1999, UNGA A/54/549.Google Scholar
(ed.), Report of the Independent Inquiry into the Actions of the United Nations during the 1994 Genocide in Rwanda, 16 December 1999, UNSC S/1999/1257.Google Scholar
(ed.), Prevention of Armed Conflict. Report of the Secretary-General on the Work of the Organization, 7 June 2001, UNGA A/55/985 – S/2001/574.Google Scholar
(ed.), Resolution 60/1, 2005 World Summit Outcome, 24 October 2005, UNGA A/RES/60/1.Google Scholar
(ed.), Resolution 1970 (2011), 26 February 2011, UNSC S/RES/1970.Google Scholar
(ed.), Resolution 1973 (2011), 17 March 2011, UNSC S/RES/1973.Google Scholar
Argenti, Philip P. (ed.), The Massacres of Chios: Described in Contemporary Diplomatic Reports, London 1932.Google Scholar
Dallek, Robert (ed.), 1898: McKinley’s Decision: The United States Declares War on Spain, New York 1969.Google Scholar
Dickins, Ashbury/Allen, James C. (eds.), American State Papers: Documents, Legislative and Executive of the Congress of the United States, vol. 5, Washington, DC 1858.Google Scholar
Doubleday, & McClure, (ed.), Speeches and Addresses of William McKinley, From March 1, 1897 to May 30, 1900, New York 1900.Google Scholar
Gatter, Frank Thomas (ed.), Protokolle und Generalakte der Berliner Afrika-Konferenz 1884–1885, Bremen 1984.Google Scholar
Geiss, Imanuel (ed.), Der Berliner Kongreß 1878: Protokolle und Materialen, Boppard 1978.Google Scholar
Grewe, Wilhelm G. (ed.), Fontes Historiae Iuris Gentium, vol. 3/1, 1815–1945, Berlin 1992.Google Scholar
Harrison, T. R. (ed.), Treaties, Conventions and Engagements, for the Suppression of the Slave Trade, London 1844.Google Scholar
Hertslet, Edward (ed.), A Complete Collection of the Treaties and Conventions at Present Subsisting between Great Britain and Foreign Powers, vol. 1, London 1820.Google Scholar
Hertslet, Edward A Complete Collection of the Treaties and Conventions, and Reciprocal Regulations at Present Subsisting between Great Britain and Foreign Powers, vol. 3, London 1841.Google Scholar
Hertslet, Edward A Complete Collection of the Treaties and Conventions, and Reciprocal Regulations at Present Subsisting between Great Britain and Foreign Powers, vol. 5, London 1840.Google Scholar
Hertslet, Edward The Map of Europe by Treaty; Showing the Various Political and Territorial Changes Which Have Taken Place since the General Peace of 1814, vol. IV, 1875 to 1891, London 1891.Google Scholar
Klüber, Johann Ludwig (ed.), Acten des Wiener Congresses in den Jahren 1814 und 1815, vol. 8, Erlangen 1818.Google Scholar
LaFeber, Walter (ed.), John Quincy Adams and American Continental Empire: Letters, Papers, and Speeches, Chicago, IL 1965.Google Scholar
Lane-Poole, Stanley (ed.), The Life of the Right Honourable Stratford Canning: From His Memoirs and Private and Official Papers, vol. 1, London 1888.Google Scholar
Miller, Hunter (ed.), Treaties and Other International Acts of the United States of America, vol. 2: 1976–1818, Washington, DC 1931.Google Scholar
Newbury, C. W. (ed.), British Policy towards West Africa: Select Documents 1786–1874, Oxford 1965.Google Scholar
Richardson, James D. (ed.), A Compilation of the Messages and Papers of the Presidents, 1789–1897, vol. IV, Washington, DC 1899.Google Scholar
Vane, Charles (ed.), Correspondence, Despatches and Other Papers of Viscount Castlereagh, vol. 11, London 1853.Google Scholar
Wellington, Arthur Wellesley of (ed.), Despatches, Correspondence, and Memoranda of Field Marshal Arthur Duke of Wellington, vol. 1, London 1867.Google Scholar
Wellington, Arthur Wellesley of (ed.), Supplementary Despatches, Correspondence, and Memoranda of Field Marshal Arthur Duke of Wellington, vol. 2, London 1867.Google Scholar
Wellington, Arthur Wellesley of (ed.), Supplementary Despatches, Correspondence, and Memoranda of Field Marshal Arthur Duke of Wellington, vol. 3, London 1868.Google Scholar
Wellington, Arthur Wellesley of (ed.), Supplementary Despatches, Correspondence, and Memoranda of Field Marshal Arthur Duke of Wellington, vol. 9, London 1862.Google Scholar
Wellington, Arthur Wellesley of (ed.), Supplementary Despatches, Correspondence, and Memoranda of Field Marshal Arthur Duke of Wellington, vol. 10, London 1863.Google Scholar
Abe, Yuki, Norm Dilemmas in Humanitarian Intervention: How Bosnia Changed NATO, Abingdon 2019.Google Scholar
Abiew, Francis Kofi, The Evolution of the Doctrine and Practice of Humanitarian Intervention, The Hague 1999.Google Scholar
Ackerson, Wayne, The African Institution (1807–1827) and the Antislavery Movement in Great Britain, Lewiston, ME 2005.Google Scholar
Adak, Hülya, The Legacy of André Nikolaievitch Mandelstam (1869–1949) and the Early History of Human Rights, Zeitschrift für Religions- und Geistesgeschichte, 70/2 (2018), 117130.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adams, Charles Francis (ed.), Memoirs of John Quincy Adams, Comprising Portions of His Diary 1795–1848, vol. 4, New York 1969.Google Scholar
Adams, Charles Francis (ed.), Memoirs of John Quincy Adams, Comprising Portions of His Diary 1795–1848, vol. 5, New York 1969.Google Scholar
Adams, Charles Francis (ed.), Memoirs of John Quincy Adams, Comprising Portions of His Diary 1795–1848, vol. 6, New York 1969.Google Scholar
Ade Ajayi, Jacob. F./Oloruntimehin, B. O., Africa at the Beginning of the Nineteenth Century: Issues and Prospects, in Ade Ajayi, Jacob F. (ed.), General History of Africa, vol. 6: Africa in the Nineteenth Century until the 1880s, Paris 1989, 122.Google Scholar
Ade Ajayi, Jacob. F./Oloruntimehin, B. O., West Africa in the Anti-Slave Trade Era, in Flint, John E. (ed.), The Cambridge History of Africa, vol. 5: From c. 1790 to c. 1870, Cambridge 1976, 200221.Google Scholar
Ahlskog, Jonas, The Political Economy of Colonisation: Carl Bernhard Wadström’s Case for Abolition and Civilisation, Sjuttonhundratal: Nordic Yearbook for Eighteenth-Century Studies 7 (2010), 146167.Google Scholar
Alagoa, E. J., The Niger Delta and the Cameroon Region, in Ade Ajayi, Jacob F. (ed.), General History of Africa, vol. 6: Africa in the Nineteenth Century until the 1880s, Paris 1989, 724748.Google Scholar
Alexandrowicz, Charles Henry, The European–African Confrontation: A Study in Treaty Making, Leiden 1973.Google Scholar
Allain, Jean, Fydor Martens and the Question of Slavery at the 1890 Brussels Conference, in Jean Allain, The Law and Slavery: Prohibiting Human Exploitation, Leiden 2015, 101120.Google Scholar
Allain, Jean, The Nineteenth Century Law of the Sea and the British Abolition of the Slave Trade, British Yearbook of International Law 78/1 (2007), 342388.Google Scholar
Allain, Jean, Slavery and the League of Nations: Ethiopia as a Civilised Nation, in Jean Allain, The Law and Slavery: Prohibiting Human Exploitation, Leiden 2015, 121158.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Alpers, Edward A., On Becoming a British Lake: Piracy, Slaving, and British Imperialism in the Indian Ocean during the First Half of the Nineteenth Century, in Harms, Robert/Freamon, Bernard K./Blight, David W. (eds.), Indian Ocean Slavery in the Age of Abolition, New Haven, CT 2013, 4558.Google Scholar
Ammon, Harry/Monroe, James, The Quest for National Identity, Charlottesville, VA 1990.Google Scholar
Anderson, B. L./Richardson, David, Market Structure and the Profits of the British African Trade in the Late Eighteenth Century: A Comment, Journal of Economic History 43/3 (September 1983), 713721.Google Scholar
Anderson, J. L., Piracy and World History: An Economic Perspective on Maritime Predation, Journal of World History 6/2 (Autumn 1995), 175199.Google Scholar
Anderson, Matthew S., The Eastern Question 1774–1923: A Study in International Relations, Basingstoke 1991.Google Scholar
Anghie, Anthony, Imperialism, Sovereignty and the Making of International Law, Cambridge 2005.Google Scholar
Annan, Kofi, Interventions: A Life in War and Peace, New York 2012.Google Scholar
Annan, Kofi, ‘We the peoples’: The Role of the United Nations in the 21st Century. Report of the Secretary-General, New York 2000.Google Scholar
Anonymous, Address in Behalf of the Greeks: Especially Those Who Have Survived the Late Massacre in Scio, Edinburgh 1822.Google Scholar
Anon, Address & Petition to His Majesty from the Inhabitants of the Town and Neighbourhood of Sheffield, Sheffield 1794.Google Scholar
Anon, Case of Our Fellow-Creatures, The Oppressed Africans, Respectfully Recommended to the Serious Consideration of the Legislature of Great Britain, By the People Called Quakers, London 1784.Google Scholar
Anon, Considerations Addressed to Professors of Christianity of Every Denomination, on the Impropriety of Consuming West-India Sugar and Rum, as Produced by the Oppressive Labour of Slaves, London 1792.Google Scholar
Anon, The Destruction of Lagos, London 1852.Google Scholar
Anon, East African Slave Trade, Quarterly Review 133/266 (October 1872), 521557.Google Scholar
Anon, General Bell’s Reconcentration Policy, Literary Digest XXIV/5 (1 February 1902), 138139.Google Scholar
Anon, Observations on That Part of the Late Treaty of Peace with France Which Relates to the African Slave Trade, Extracted from a Periodical Work for June 1814, London 1814.Google Scholar
Anon, Slavery in Africa: A Speech by Cardinal Lavigerie (31 July 1888), Boston 1888.Google Scholar
Anstey, Roger, The Atlantic Slave Trade and British Abolition, 1760–1810, London 1975.Google Scholar
Ashworth, John, The Relationship between Capitalism and Humanitarianism, American Historical Review 92/4 (October 1987), 813828.Google Scholar
Athanassoglou-Kallmyer, Nina, French Images from the Greek War of Independence 1821–1830: Art and Politics under Restoration, New Haven, CT 1989.Google Scholar
Atkinson, Geoffrey, The Sentimental Revolution: French Writers of 1690–1740, Seattle, WA 1965.Google Scholar
Aust, Helmut Philipp, From Diplomat to Academic Activist: André Mandelstam and the History of Human Rights, European Journal of International Law 25/4 (2014), 11051121.Google Scholar
Austen, Ralph A./Smith, Woodruff D., Images of Africa and British Slave-Trade Abolition: The Transition to an Imperialist Ideology, 1787–1807, African Historical Studies 2/1 (1969), 6983.Google Scholar
Auxier, George W., Middle Western Newspapers and the Spanish–American War, 1895–1898, Mississippi Valley Historical Review 26/4 (March 1940), 523534.Google Scholar
Auxier, George W., The Propaganda Activities of the Cuban Junta in Precipitating the Spanish–American War, 1895–1898, Hispanic American Historical Review 19/3 (August 1939), 286305.Google Scholar
Bailey, John (ed.), The Diary of Lady Frederick Cavendish, vol. II, London 1927.Google Scholar
Bain, William, Vitoria: The Law of War, Saving the Innocent, and the Image of God, in Recchia, Stefano/Welsh, Jennifer M. (eds.), Just and Unjust Military Intervention: European Thinkers from Vitoria to Mill, Cambridge 2013, 7095.Google Scholar
Bandinel, James, Some Account of the Trade in Slaves from Africa as Connected with Europe and America, London 1842.Google Scholar
Barker, Hannah/Burrows, Simon (eds.), Press, Politics and the Public Sphere in Europe and North America, 1760–1820, Cambridge 2002.Google Scholar
Barker-Benfield, G. J., The Culture of Sensibility: Sex and Society in Eighteenth-Century Britain, Chicago, IL 1992.Google Scholar
Barkey, Karen, Empire of Difference: The Ottomans in Comparative Perspective, Cambridge 2009.Google Scholar
Barlier, Jean-Pierre, La Société des Amis des Noirs 1788–1791: Aux origines de la première abolition de l’esclavage (4 février 1794), Paris 2010.Google Scholar
Barman, Roderick J., Brazil: The Forging of a Nation, 1798–1852, Stanford, CA 1988.Google Scholar
Barnett, Michael, Empire of Humanity: A History of Humanitarianism, Ithaca, NY 2011.Google Scholar
Barnett, Michael, (ed.), Humanitarianism and Human Rights: A World of Differences?, Cambridge 2020.Google Scholar
Barnett, Michael/Weiss, Thomas G. (eds.), Humanitarianism in Question: Politics, Power, Ethics, Ithaca, NY 2008.Google Scholar
Barrow, John, The Life and Correspondence of Admiral Sir William Sidney Smith, vol. 2, London 1848.Google Scholar
Barton, Clara, A Story of the Red Cross: Glimpses of Field Work, New York 1904.Google Scholar
Barton, Gregory A., Informal Empire and the Rise of One World Culture, Basingstoke 2014.Google Scholar
Bass, Gary J., Freedom’s Battle: The Origins of Humanitarian Intervention, New York 2008.Google Scholar
Baumgart, Winfried, Imperialism: The Idea and Reality of British and French Colonial Expansion, 1880–1914, Oxford 1982.Google Scholar
Baumgart, Winfried, The Crimean War 1853?1856, London 1999.Google Scholar
Bayly, Christopher A., The Birth of the Modern World, 1780–1914, New York 2004.Google Scholar
Bazyler, M., Reexamining the Doctrine of Humanitarian Intervention in the Light of the Atrocities in Kampuchea and Ethiopia, Stanford Journal of International Law 23 (1987), 547619.Google Scholar
Beachey, R. W., The Slave Trade of Eastern Africa, London 1976.Google Scholar
Beaulac, Stéphane, The Power of Language in the Making of International Law: The Word Sovereignty in Bodin and Vattel and the Myth of Westphalia, Leiden 2004.Google Scholar
Beck, Ulrich, Der kosmopolitische Blick oder: Krieg ist Frieden, Frankfurt a. M. 2004.Google Scholar
Behrendt, Stephen D./Eltis, David/Richardson, David, The Costs of Coercion: African Agency in the Pre-Modern Atlantic World, Economic History Review 54/3 (August 2001), 454476.Google Scholar
Behuniak, Thomas E., The Law of Unilateral Humanitarian Intervention by Armed Force: A Legal Survey, Military Law Review 79/27 (Winter 1978), 157191.Google Scholar
Bell, Duncan S., Empire and International Relations in Victorian Political Thought, Historical Journal 49/1 (March 2006), 281298.Google Scholar
Bell, Duncan S., Victorian Visions of Global Order: Empire and International Relations in Nineteenth-Century Political Thought, Cambridge 2007.Google Scholar
Bellamy, Alex J. (ed.), Humanitarian Intervention, vol. I: Law, Ethics, and Theories, London 2017.Google Scholar
Bellamy, Alex J. (ed.), Humanitarian Intervention, vol. II: Humanitarian Intervention in History, London 2017.Google Scholar
Bellamy, Alex J. (ed.), Humanitaran Intervention, vol. III: Humanitarian Intervention in Contemporary Practice, London 2017.Google Scholar
Bellamy, Alex J. (ed.), Humanitarian Intervention, vol. IV: Beyond Humanitarian Intervention: The Responsibility to Protect, London 2017.Google Scholar
Bellamy, Alex J./McLoughlin, Stephen, Rethinking Humanitarian Intervention, London 2018.Google Scholar
Bemis, Samuel F., John Quincy Adams and the Foundation of American Foreign Policy, New York 1949.Google Scholar
Bender, Thomas (ed.), The Antislavery Debate: Capitalism and Abolitionism as a Problem in Historical Interpretation, Berkeley, CA 1992.Google Scholar
Benezet, Anthony, A Caution and Warning to Great Britain and Her Colonies, in a Short Representation of the Calamitous State of the Enslaved Negroes in the British Dominions, Philadelphia, PA 1766.Google Scholar
Benezet, Anthony, Observations on the Inslaving, Importing and Purchasing of Negroes, Germantown, PA 1760.Google Scholar
Benezet, Anthony, Some Historical Account of Guinea, Its Situation, Produce and the General Disposition of Its Inhabitants: With an Inquiry into the Rise and Progress of the Slave Trade, Its Nature and Lamentable Effects, Philadelphia, PA 1771.Google Scholar
Benjamin, Jules R., The United States and the Origins of the Cuban Revolution: An Empire of Liberty in an Age of National Liberation, Princeton, NJ 1990.Google Scholar
Bennett, Norman R., A History of the Arab State of Zanzibar, London 1978.Google Scholar
Bentham, Jeremy, An Introduction to the Principles of Morals and Legislation, London 1789.Google Scholar
Benton, Elbert J., International Law and Diplomacy of the Spanish–American War, Gloucester 1968.Google Scholar
Benton, Lauren, Abolition and Imperial Law 1790–1820, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 39/3 (September 2011), 355374.Google Scholar
Benton, Lauren, From International Law to Imperial Constitutions: The Problem of Quasi-Sovereignty, 1870–1900, Law and History Review 26/3 (Autumn 2008), 595619.Google Scholar
Benton, Lauren, A Search for Sovereignty. Law and Geography in European Empires, 1400–1900, Cambridge 2010.Google Scholar
Benton, Lauren/Clulow, Adam/Attwood, Bain (eds.), Protection and Empire: A Global History, Cambridge 2017.Google Scholar
Berding, Helmut, Die Ächtung des Sklavenhandels auf dem Wiener Kongress 1814/15, Historische Zeitschrift 219/2 (October 1974), 265289.Google Scholar
Bergad, Laird W., The Comparative Histories of Slavery in Brazil, Cuba, and the United States, Cambridge 2007.Google Scholar
Bethell, Leslie, Britain, Portugal and the Suppression of the Brazilian Slave Trade: The Origins of Lord Palmerston’s Act of 1839, English Historical Review 80/357 (1965), 761784.Google Scholar
The Mixed Commissions for the Suppression of the Slave Trade in the Nineteenth Century, Journal of African History 7/1 (1966), 7993.Google Scholar
The Independence of Brazil and the Abolition of the Brazilian Slave Trade:Anglo-Brazilian Relations, 1822–1826, Journal of Latin American Studies ½ (November 1969), 117147.Google Scholar
The Abolition of the Brazilian Slave Trade: Britain, Brazil and the Slave Trade Question 1807–1869, Cambridge 1970.Google Scholar
Betts, Paul, Universalism and Its Discontents: Humanity as a Twentieth-Century Concept, in Fabian, Klose/Mirjam, Thulin (eds.), Humanity: A History of European Concepts in Practice from the Sixteenth Century to the Present, Göttingen 2017, 5170.Google Scholar
Bew, John, ‘From an Umpire to a Competitor’: Castlereagh, Canning and the Issue of International Intervention in the Wake of the Napoleonic Wars, in Simms, Brendan/Trim, David J. B. (eds.), Humanitarian Intervention: A History, Cambridge 2011, 117138.Google Scholar
Binder, Martin, The United Nations and the Politics of Selective Humanitarian Intervention, Cham 2017.Google Scholar
Bitis, Alexander, Russia and the Eastern Question: Army, Government, and Society 1815–1833, Oxford 2006.Google Scholar
Blackburn, Robin, The Overthrow of Colonial Slavery 1776–1848, London 1988.Google Scholar
The Making of New World Slavery: From the Baroque to the Modern, 1492–1800, London 1997.Google Scholar
The American Crucible: Slavery, Emancipation, and Human Rights, London 2011.Google Scholar
Blanning, T. C. W. (ed.), The Nineteenth Century: The Short Oxford History of Europe, Oxford 2000.Google Scholar
Blaufarb, Rafe, The Western Question: The Geopolitics of Latin American Independence, American Historical Review 112/3 (June 2007), 742763.Google Scholar
Bluntschli, Johann Caspar, Das moderne Völkerrecht der civilisirten Staten als Rechtsbuch dargestellt, Nördlingen 1868.Google Scholar
Bluntschli, Johann Caspar, Das moderne Völkerrecht der civilisirten Staten als Rechtsbuch dargestellt: Dritte mit Rücksicht auf die neueren Ereignisse bis 1877 ergänzte Auflage, Nördlingen 1878.Google Scholar
Bly, Antonio T., Crossing the Lake of Fire: Slave Resistance during the Middle Passage, 1720–1842, Journal of Negro History 83/3 (Summer 1998), 178186.Google Scholar
Blyth, Robert, Britain, the Royal Navy and the Suppression of the Slave Trade in the Nineteenth Century, in Blyth, Robert/Hamilton, Douglas (eds.), Representing Slavery: Art, Artefacts and Archives in the Collection of the National Maritime Museum, Aldershot 2007, 7691.Google Scholar
Bödeker, Hans Erich, Menschheit, Humanität, Humanismus, in Brunner, Otto/Conze, Werner/Koselleck, Reinhart (eds.), Geschichtliche Grundbegriffe: Historisches Lexikon zur politisch-sozialen Sprache in Deutschland, vol. 3, Stuttgart 1982, 10631128.Google Scholar
Bogen, David S., The Law of Humanitarian Intervention: United States Policy in Cuba (1898) and in the Dominican Republic (1965), Harvard International Law Club Journal 7/2 (Spring 1966), 296315.Google Scholar
Boli, John/Thomas, Goerge M. (eds.), Constructing World Culture: International Nongovernmental Organizations since 1875, Stanford, CA 1999.Google Scholar
Booth, Alan R., The United States African Squadron, 1843–1861, in Butler, Jeffrey (ed.), Boston University Paper in African History, vol. 1, Boston, MA 1964, 77117.Google Scholar
Bourke, Joanna, What It Means to Be Human: Historical Reflections from the 1800s to the Present, Berkeley, CA 2011.Google Scholar
Bouyrat, Yann, Devoir d’intervenir? L’expédition ‘humanitaire’ de la France au Liban, 1860, Paris 2013.Google Scholar
Bouyrat, Yann, La France et les maronites du Mont-Liban: Nassiance d’une relation privilégiée (1831–1861), Paris 2013.Google Scholar
Bowden, Brett, The Empire of Civilization: The Evolution of an Imperial Idea, Chicago, IL 2009.Google Scholar
Bradley, James E., Religion, Revolution, and English Radicalism: Nonconformity in Eighteenth-Century Politics and Society, Cambridge 1990.Google Scholar
Bradley, Mark Philip, The World Reimagined: Americans and Human Rights in the Twentieth Century, New York 2016.Google Scholar
Braun, Theodore E. D./Radner, John B. (eds.), The Lisbon Earthquake of 1755: Representation and Reactions, Oxford 2005.Google Scholar
Brewer, David, The Flame of Freedom: The Greek War of Independence 1821–1833, London 2001.Google Scholar
Brissenden, Robert F., Virtue in Distress: Studies in the Novel of Sentiment from Richardson to Sade, London 1974.Google Scholar
Brody, David, Visualizing American Empire: Orientalism and Imperialism in the Philippines, Chicago, IL 2010.Google Scholar
Brown, Charles H., The Correspondents’ War: Journalists in the Spanish–American War, New York 1967.Google Scholar
Brown, Chris, Humanitarian Intervention and International Political Theory, in Mosley, Alexander/Norman, Richard (eds.), Human Rights and Military Intervention, London 2018, 153169.Google Scholar
Brown, Christopher Leslie, Christianity and the Campaign against Slavery and the Slave Trade, in Brown, Stewart J./Tackett, Timothy (eds.), The Cambridge History of Christianity, vol. VII: Enlightenment, Reawakening and Revolution 1660–1815, Cambridge 2006, 517535.Google Scholar
Moral Capital: Foundations of British Abolitionism, Chapel Hill, NC 2006.Google Scholar
Empire without America: British Plans for Africa in the Era of the American Revolution, in Peterson, Derek R. (ed.), Abolitionism and Imperialism in Britain, Africa, and the Atlantic, Athens, GA 2010, 84100.Google Scholar
Brown, Richard D./Wilson, Richard (eds.), Humanitarianism and Suffering: The Mobilization of Empathy, Cambridge 2009.Google Scholar
Brown, Robert T., Fernando Po and the Anti-Sierra Leonean Campaign: 1826–1834, International Journal of African Historical Studies 6/2 (1973), 249264.Google Scholar
Brownlie, Ian, International Law and the Use of Force by States, Oxford 1963.Google Scholar
Humanitarian Intervention, in Moore, John N. (ed.), Law and Civil War in the Modern World, Baltimore, MD 1974, 217228.Google Scholar
Bruce, David, The Life of Sir Thomas Fowell Buxton: Extraordinary Perseverance, Plymouth 2014.Google Scholar
Bruch, Elizabeth M., Human Rights and Humanitarian Intervention: Law and Practice in the Field, London 2016.Google Scholar
Bruns, Roger A., Anthony Benezet and the Natural Rights of the Negro, Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 96/1 (January 1972), 104113.Google Scholar
Am I Not a Man and a Brother: The Antislavery Crusade of Revolutionary America 1688–1788, New York 1977.Google Scholar
Buchanan, Allen, Reforming the International Law of Humanitarian Intervention, in Holzgrefe, Jeff L./Keohane, Robert O. (eds.), Humanitarian Intervention: Ethical, Legal, and Political Dilemmas, Cambridge 2004, 130173.Google Scholar
Bull, Hedley (ed.), Interventions in World Politics, Oxford 1986.Google Scholar
Bull, Hedley/Kingsbury, Benedict/Roberts, Adam (eds.), Hugo Grotius and International Relations, Oxford 2003.Google Scholar
Bullen, Roger, The Great Powers and the Iberian Peninsula, 1815–48, in Sked, Alan (ed.), Europe’s Balance of Power 1815–1848, London 1979, 5478.Google Scholar
Burbank, Jane/Cooper, Frederick, Empires in World History: Power and the Politics of Difference, Princeton, NJ 2010.Google Scholar
Burger, Herman, André Mandelstam, Forgotten Pioneer of International Human Rights, in Coomans, Fons/Grünfeld, Fred/Westendorp, Ingrid (eds.), Rendering Justice to the Vulnerable: Liber Amicorum in Honor of Theo van Boven, The Hague 2000, 6982.Google Scholar
Burke, Ciarán, An Equitable Framework for Humanitarian Intervention, Oxford 2013.Google Scholar
Burke, Edmund, Reflections on the Revolution in France, London 1790.Google Scholar
A Letter from Mr. Burke to a Member of the National Assembly, London 1791.Google Scholar
Burroughs, Robert, Eyes on the Prize: Journeys in Slave Ships Taken as Prizes by the Royal Navy, Slavery and Abolition 31/1 (March 2010), 99115.Google Scholar
Butler-Johnstone, Henry A. Munro, Bulgarian Horrors, and the Question of the East: A Letter Addressed to the Right Hon. W. E. Gladstone, M. P., London 1876.Google Scholar
Buxton, Thomas Fowell, The African Slave Trade and Its Remedy, London 1840.Google Scholar
Byrd, Alexander X., Eboe, Country, Nation, and Gustavus Vassa’s Interesting Narrative, William and Mary Quarterly 63/1 (January 2006), 123148.Google Scholar
Cairns, H. Alan C., Prelude to Imperialism: British Reactions to Central African Society 1840–1890, London 1965.Google Scholar
Canney, Donald L., Africa Squadron: The U.S. Navy and the Slave Trade, 1842–1861, Washington, DC 2006.Google Scholar
Carey, Brycchan, British Abolitionism and the Rhetoric of Sensibility: Writing, Sentiment, and Slavery, 1760– 1807, New York 2005.Google Scholar
Carey, Brycchan, From Peace to Freedom: Quaker Rhetoric and the Birth of American Antislavery, 1657–1761, New Haven, CT 2012.Google Scholar
Carey, Brycchan/Ellis, Markman/Salih, Sara (eds.), Discourses of Slavery and Abolition: Britain and Its Colonies, 1760–1838, Basingstoke 2004.Google Scholar
Carretta, Vincent, Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa? New Light on an Eighteenth-Century Question of Identity, Slavery & Abolition 20/3 (December 1999), 96105.Google Scholar
Equiano, the African: Biography of a Self-Made Man, Athens, GA 2005.Google Scholar
Cateau, Heather/Carrington, Selwyn H. (eds.), Capitalism and Slavery: Fifty Years Later, New York 2000.Google Scholar
Cecil, Gwendolen, Life of Robert Marques of Salisbury, vol. IV: 1887–1892, London 1932.Google Scholar
Chapin, Chester, Shaftesbury and the Man of Feeling, Modern Philology 81/1 (August 1983), 4750.Google Scholar
Chaplin, Joyce E., Slavery and the Principle of Humanity: A Modern Idea in the Early Lower South, Journal of Social History 24/2 (Winter 1990), 299315.Google Scholar
Charney, Jonathan I., Anticipatory Humanitarian Intervention in Kosovo, American Journal of International Law 93/4 (October 1999), 834841.Google Scholar
Chesterman, Simon, Just War or Just Peace? Humanitarian Intervention and International Law, Oxford 2003.Google Scholar
Chomsky, Noam, The New Military Humanism: Lessons from Kosovo, London 1999.Google Scholar
Chomsky, Noam, A New Generation Draws the Line: ‘Humanitarian’ Intervention and the Standards of the West, London 2012.Google Scholar
Christie, William Dougal, Notes on Brazilian Questions, London 1865.Google Scholar
Christopher, Emma, Slave Ship Sailors and Their Captive Cargoes, 1730–1807, Cambridge 2006.Google Scholar
Church Missionary Society (ed.), The Slave Trade of East Africa, London 1869.Google Scholar
Clark, Ian, International Legitimacy and World Society, Oxford 2007.Google Scholar
Clarke, Richard F. (ed.), Cardinal Lavigerie and the African Slave Trade, London 1889.Google Scholar
Clarkson, Thomas, An Essay on the Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species, Particularly the African, Translated from a Latin Dissertation, London 1786.Google Scholar
A Summary View of the Slave Trade and of the Consequences of Its Abolition, London 1787.Google Scholar
An Essay on the Impolicy of the African Slave Trade, London 1788.Google Scholar
A Short Address Originally Written to the People of Scotland on the Subject of the Slave Trade with a Summary View of the Evidence Delivered before a Committee of the House of Commons on the Part of the Petitioners for Its Abolition, Shrewsbury 1792.Google Scholar
The History of the Rise, Progress, and Accomplishment of the Abolition of the African Slave-Trade by the British Parliament, vol. 1, London 1808.Google Scholar
The History of the Rise, Progress, and Accomplishment of the Abolition of the African Slave-Trade by the British Parliament, vol. 2, London 1808.Google Scholar
Eine summarische Uebersicht der vor dem Ausschuß des Unterhauses des Großbritannischen Parlaments abgelegten Zeugnisse über den Gegenstand des Sclaven-Handels den verschiedenen Regenten in der christlichen Welt, London 1814.Google Scholar
Clifford, Mary Louise, From Slavery to Freetown: Black Loyalists after the American Revolution, Jefferson, TX 1999.Google Scholar
Clogg, Richard, Some Aspects of the Philhellenic Press in Britain during the Early Nineteenth Century, Philhellenische Studien 3 (1994), 1930.Google Scholar
Coady, C. A. J./Dobos, Ned/Sanyal, Sagar (eds.), Challenges for Humanitarian Intervention: Ethical Demand and Political Reality, Oxford 2018.Google Scholar
Cohn, Raymond L., Deaths of Slaves in the Middle Passage, Journal of Economic History 45/3 (September 1985), 685692.Google Scholar
Coleman, Deirdre, Romantic Colonization and British Anti-Slavery, Cambridge 2005.Google Scholar
Colley, Linda, Britons: Forging the Nation 1707–1837, London 2003.Google Scholar
Colomb, Captain Philip Howard, Slave-Catching in the Indian Ocean: A Record of Naval Experiences, London 1873.Google Scholar
Conneau, Theophilus, A Slaver’s Log Book or 20 Years’ Residence in Africa, Englewood Cliffs, NJ 1976.Google Scholar
Conrad, Robert E., Neither Slave nor Free: The Emancipados of Brazil, 1818–1868, Hispanic American Historical Review 53/1 (February 1973), 5070.Google Scholar
Conrad, Robert E., World of Sorrow: The African Slave Trade to Brazil, Baton Rouge, LA 1986.Google Scholar
Cosmas, Graham A., An Army for Empire: The United States Army in the Spanish-American War, 1898–1899, College Station, TX 1994.Google Scholar
Coupland, Reginald, The British Anti-Slavery Movement, London 1964.Google Scholar
Coupland, Reginald, The Exploitation of East Africa 1856–1890: The Slave Trade and the Scramble, London 1968.Google Scholar
Crafton, William Bell, A Sketch of the Evidence Delivered before a Committee of the House of Commons for the Abolition of the Slave-Trade: To Which Is Added, a Recommendation of the Subject to the Serious Attention of People in General, London 1792.Google Scholar
Crane, Ronald S., Suggestions toward a Genealogy of the ‘Man of Feeling’, Journal of English Literary History 1/3 (December 1934), 205230.Google Scholar
Crapol, Edward P., John Quincy Adams and the Monroe Doctrine: Some New Evidence, Pacific Historical Review 48/3 (August 1979), 413418.Google Scholar
Craton, Michael, The Passion to Exist: Slave Rebellions in the British West Indies 1650–1832, Journal of Caribbean History 13 (Summer 1980), 120.Google Scholar
Craven, W. F. Jr, The Risk of the Monroe Doctrine (1823–1824), Hispanic American Historical Review 7/3 (August 1927), 320333.Google Scholar
Crawley, C. W., The Question of Greek Independence: A Study of British Policy in the Near East, 1821–1833, New York 1973.Google Scholar
Cray, Robert E. Jr Remembering the USS Chesapeake: The Politics of Maritime Death and Impressment, Journal of the Early Republic 25/3 (Autumn 2005), 445474.Google Scholar
Cresson, W. P., The Holy Alliance: The European Background of the Monroe Doctrine, New York 1922.Google Scholar
Crosby, David L., Anthony Benezet’s Transformation of Anti-Slavery Rhetoric, Slavery & Abolition 23/3 (December 2002), 3958.Google Scholar
Croxton, Derek, The Peace of Westphalia of 1648 and the Origins of Sovereingty, International History Review 21/3 (September 1999), 569591.Google Scholar
Csengei, Ildiko, Sympathy, Sensibility, and the Literature of Feeling in the Eighteenth-Century, Basingstoke 2012.Google Scholar
Cugoano, Ottobah, Thoughts and Sentiments on the Evil and Wicked Traffic of the Slavery and Commerce of the Human Species, London 1787.Google Scholar
Cullinane, Michael Patrick, Liberty and American Anti-Imperialism 1898–1909, New York 2012.Google Scholar
Cunliffe, Philip, Cosmopolitan Dystopia: International Intervention and the Failure of the West, Manchester 2020.Google Scholar
Cunningham, Alan, The Philhellenes, Canning and Greek Independence, Middle Eastern Studies 14/2 (May 1978), 151181.Google Scholar
Cunningham, Hugh/Innes, Joanna (eds.), Charity, Philanthropy, and Reform: From the 1690s to 1850, Basingstoke 1998.Google Scholar
Curtin, Philip D., The Atlantic Slave Trade: A Census, Madison, WI 1969.Google Scholar
Curtin, Philip D., The Image of Africa: British Ideas and Action, 1780–1850, vol. 1, Madison, WI 1973.Google Scholar
Curtin, Philip D., The Rise and Fall of the Plantation Complex: Essays in Atlantic History. Cambridge 1999.Google Scholar
Daget, Serge, The Abolition of the Slave Trade by France: The Decisive Years 1826–1831, in Richardson, David (ed.), Abolition and Its Aftermath: The Historical Context, 1790–1916, London 1985, 141167.Google Scholar
Tactiques, stratégies et effets du droit de visite, in Daget, Serge (ed.), De la traite à l’esclavage: Actes du Colloque international sur la traite des Noirs, Nantes 1988, 343358.Google Scholar
The Abolition of the Slave Trade, in Ade Ajayi, Jacob F. (ed.), General History of Africa, vol. VI: Africa in the Nineteenth Century until the 1880s, Paris 1989, 6489.Google Scholar
La répression de la traite des Noirs au XIXe siècle: L’action des croisières françaises sur les côtes occidentales de l’Afrique (1817–1850), Paris 1997.Google Scholar
Dakin, Douglas, British and American Philhellenes during the War of Greek Independence, 1821–1833, Thessaloniki 1955.Google Scholar
Dakin, Douglas, The Greek Struggle for Independence 1821–1833, Berkeley, CA 1973.Google Scholar
Daly, John C. K., Russian Seapower and the ‘Eastern Question’ 1827–41, Basingstoke 1991.Google Scholar
Darwin, John, Imperialism and the Victorians: The Dynamics of Territorial Expansion, English Historical Review 112/447 (June 1997), 614642.Google Scholar
After Tamerlane: The Rise and Fall of Global Empires, 1400–2000, London 2007.Google Scholar
Davey, Eleanor, The Language of ingérence: Interventionist Debates in France, 1970s–1990s, in Frei, Norbert/Stahl, Daniel/Weinke, Annette (eds.), Human Rights and Humanitarian Intervention: Legitimizing the Use of Force since the 1970s, Göttingen 2017, 4663.Google Scholar
David, Huw T., Transnational Advocacy in the Eighteenth Century: Transatlantic Activism and the Anti-Slavery Movement, Global Networks 7/3 (2007), 367382.Google Scholar
Davidson, Basil, Black Mother Africa: The Years of Trial, London 1961.Google Scholar
Davis, David Brion, The Problem of Slavery in Western Culture, Ithaca, NY 1966.Google Scholar
The Problem of Slavery in the Age of Revolution, 1770–1823, Ithaca, NY 1975.Google Scholar
Slavery and Human Progress, New York 1984.Google Scholar
Inhuman Bondage: The Rise and Fall of Slavery in the New World, Oxford 2006.Google Scholar
Slave Revolts and Abolitionism, in Drescher, Seymour/Emmer, Pieter C (eds.), Who Abolished Slavery? Slave Revolts and Abolitionism: A Debate with Joao Pedro Marques, New York 2010, 163168.Google Scholar
The Problem of Slavery in the Age of Emancipation, New York 2014.Google Scholar
Davis, John A., Naples and Napoleon: Southern Italy and the European Revolutions 1780–1860, Oxford 2006.Google Scholar
Davis, Michael C./Dietrich, Wolfgang/Scholdan, Bettina/Sepp, Dieter, International Intervention in the Post-Cold War World: Moral Responsibility and Power Politics, Armonk, NY 2004.Google Scholar
Davis, Robert C., Counting European Slaves on the Barbary Coast, Past & Present 172/1 (August 2001), 87124.Google Scholar
Davis, Robert C., Christian Slaves, Muslim Masters: White Slavery in the Mediterranean, the Barbary Coast, and Italy, 1500–1800, Basingstoke 2003.Google Scholar
Davison, Roderic H., The Reform in the Ottoman Empire 1856–1876, Princeton, NJ 1963.Google Scholar
Dearden, Seton, A Nest of Corsairs: The Fighting Karamanlis of Tripoli, London 1976.Google Scholar
De Bruyn, Frans, Latitudinarianism and Its Importance as a Precursor of Sensibility, Journal of English and Germanic Philology 80/3 (July 1981), 349368.Google Scholar
De Chateaubriand, , François-René, Note sur la Grèce, Paris 1825.Google Scholar
Discours en réponse à M. Le Garde des Sceaux, in de Chateaubriand, François-René, OEuvres completes de Chateaubriand, vol. 5, Paris 1861, 6366.Google Scholar
Opinion sur le projet de loi relative à la repression des délits commis dans les échelles du Levant, 13 March 1826, in de Chateaubriand, François-René, OEuvres completes de Chateaubriand, vol. 5, Paris 1861, 5662.Google Scholar
De Graaf, Beatrice/de Haan, Ido/Vick, Brian (eds.), Securing Europe after Napoleon: 1815 and the New European Security Culture, Cambridge 2019.Google Scholar
DeGuzmán, María, Spain’s Long Shadow: The Black Legend, Off-Whiteness, and Anglo-American Empire, Minneapolis, MN 2005.Google Scholar
De Nevers, Renee, Imposing International Norms: Great Powers and Norm Enforcement, International Studies Review 9/1 (Spring 2007), 5380.Google Scholar
De Pradt, Dominique Dufour, De l’intervention armée pour la pacification de la Grèce, Paris 1828.Google Scholar
De Vattel, Emer, The Law of Nations, Or, Principles of the Law of Nature, Applied to the Conduct and Affairs of Nations and Sovereigns, with Three Early Essays on the Origin and Nature of Natural Law and on Luxury, edited and with an Introduction by Kapossy, Béla and Whatmore, Richard, Indianapolis, IN 2008.Google Scholar
De Worms, Henry, England’s Policy in the East, London 1876.Google Scholar
Denby, David J., Sentimental Narrative and the Social Order in France, 1760–1820, Cambridge 1994.Google Scholar
Deng, Francis M./Kimaro, Sadikiel/Lyons, Terrence/Rothchild, Donald/Zartman, I. William, Sovereignty as Responsibility: Conflict Management in Africa, Washington, DC 1996.Google Scholar
Denman, Joseph, Practical Remarks on the Slave Trade, and on the Existing Treaties with Portugal, London 1839.Google Scholar
Denman, Joseph, The Slave Trade, the African Squadron, and Mr. Hutt’s Committee, London [1850].Google Scholar
Denman, Lord Thomas, A Letter from Lord Denman to Lord Brougham, on the Final Extinction of the Slave Trade, London 1848.Google Scholar
Deutsch, Jan-Georg, Emancipation without Abolition in German East Africa c. 1884–1914, Oxford 2006.Google Scholar
Dib, Pierre, History of the Maronite Church, Beirut 1971.Google Scholar
Dickie, John, The British Consul: Heir to a Great Tradition, London 2007.Google Scholar
Diederen, Roger, Über die Grenzen: Ein Blick in die Ferne, in Diederen, Roger/Depelchin, Davy (eds.), Orientalismus in Europa: Von Delacroix bis Kandinsky, Munich 2010, 3553.Google Scholar
Dimakis, Jean, La ‘Société de la morale chrétienne’ de Paris et son action en faveur des Grecs lors de l’insurrection de 1821, Balkan Studies 7/1 (1966), 2748.Google Scholar
La guerre de l’indépendance greque vue par la presse française (Période de 1821 à 1824), Thessaloniki 1968.Google Scholar
Le Philhellénisme en Europe pendant l’insurrection grecque et le rôle de la presse, Études Slaves et Est-Européennes/Slavic and East-European Studies 13 (1968), 4653.Google Scholar
Diouf, Sylviane A. (ed.), Fighting the Slave Trade, West African Strategies, Athens , OH 2004.Google Scholar
Dodson, John (ed.), Reports of Cases Argued and Determined in the High Court of Admiralty; Commencing with the Judgments of the Right Hon. Sir William Scott (Lord Stowell), Trinity Term 1811, vol. 2: 1815–1822, London 1828.Google Scholar
Dorsett, Shaunnagh/Hunter, Ian (eds.), Law and Politics in British Colonial Thought: Transpositions of Empire, New York 2010.Google Scholar
Doulton, Lindsay, ‘The Flag That Sets Us Free’: Antislavery, Africans, and the Royal Navy in the Western Indian Ocean, in Harms, Robert/Freamon, Bernard K./Blight, David W. (eds.), Indian Ocean Slavery in the Age of Abolition, New Haven, CT 2013, 101119.Google Scholar
Drescher, Seymour, Public Opinion and the Destruction of British Slavery, in Walvin, James (ed.), Slavery and British Society 1776–1846, London 1982, 2248.Google Scholar
Capitalism and Antislavery: British Mobilization in Comparative Perspective, Oxford 1986.Google Scholar
People and Parliament: The Rhetoric of the British Slave Trade, Journal of Interdisciplinary History 20/4 (Spring 1990), 561580.Google Scholar
Way, British, Way, French: Opinion Building and Revolution in the Second French Slave Emancipation, American Historical Review 96/3 (June 1991), 709734.Google Scholar
Whose Abolition? Popular Pressure and the Ending of the British Slave Trade, Past & Present 143/1 (May 1994), 136166.Google Scholar
The Atlantic Slave Trade and the Holocaust: A Comparative Analysis, in Rosenbaum, Alan S. (ed.), Is the Holocaust Unique? Perspectives on Comparative Genocide, Boulder, CO 1996, 6585.Google Scholar
History’s Engines: British Mobilization in the Age of Revolution, William and Mary Quarterly 66/4 (October 2009), 737756.Google Scholar
Abolition: A History of Slavery and Antislavery, Cambridge 2009.Google Scholar
Econocide: British Slavery in the Era of Abolition, Chapel Hill, NC 2010.Google Scholar
Emperors of the World: British Abolitionism and Imperialism, in Peterson, Derek R. (ed.), Abolitionism and Imperialism in Britain, Africa, and the Atlantic, Athens, OH 2010, 129149.Google Scholar
From Empires of Slavery to Empires of Antislavery, in Fradera, Josep M./Schmidt-Nowara, Christopher (eds.), Slavery and Antislavery in Spain’s Atlantic Empire, New York 2013, 291316.Google Scholar
Drescher, Seymour/Emmer, Pieter C. (eds.), Who Abolished Slavery? Slave Revolts and Abolitionism: A Debate with Joao Pedro Marques, New York 2010.Google Scholar
Drescher, Seymour/Finkelman, Paul, Slavery, in Fassbender, Bardo/Peters, Anne (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of the History of International Law, Oxford 2012, 890916.Google Scholar
Du Bois, William Edward Burghardt, The Suppression of the Atlantic Slave-Trade to the United States of America 1638–1870, New York 1965.Google Scholar
Black Reconstruction in America: An Essay toward a History of the Part Which Black Folk Played in the Attempt to Reconstruct Democracy in America, 1860–1880, New York 1966.Google Scholar
Dubois, Laurent, Avengers of the New World: The Story of the Haitian Revolution, Cambridge, MA 2004.Google Scholar
Duchhardt, Heinz, ‘Westphalian System’: Zur Problematik einer Denkfigur, Historische Zeitschrift 269/2 (October 1999), 305315.Google Scholar
Dülffer, Jost, Normen und Macht, Recht, in Dülffer, Jost/Loth, Wilfried (eds.), Dimensionen internationaler Geschichte, Munich 2012, 169188.Google Scholar
Humanitarian Intervention as Legitimation of Violence – the German Case 1937–1939, in Klose, Fabian (ed.), The Emergence of Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas and Practice from the Nineteenth Century to the Present, Cambridge 2016, 208228.Google Scholar
Dülffer, Jost/Loth, Wilfried (eds.), Dimensionen Internationaler Geschichte, Munich 2012 (Studien zur Internationalen Geschichte 30).Google Scholar
Dumond, Don E., The Machete and the Cross: Campesino Rebellion in Yucatan, Lincoln, NB 1997.Google Scholar
Duram, James C., A Study of Frustration: Britain, the USA, and the African Slave Trade, 1815–1870, Social Science 40/4 (October 1965), 220225.Google Scholar
Dwan, David/Insole, Christopher M. (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Edmund Burke, Cambridge 2012.Google Scholar
Dynes, Russel R., The Lisbon Earthquake of 1755: The First Modern Disaster, in Braun, Theodore E. D./Radner, John B. (eds.), The Lisbon Earthquake of 1755: Representation and Reactions, Oxford 2005, 3449.Google Scholar
Earle, Edward M., Early American Policy Concerning Ottoman Minorities, Political Science Quarterly 42/3 (September 1927), 348351.Google Scholar
American Interest in the Greek Cause, 1821–1827, American Historical Review 33/1 (October 1927), 4463.Google Scholar
Eastern Question Association (ed.), Report of Proceedings of the National Conference at St. James’s Hall, London 1876.Google Scholar
Papers on the Eastern Question, London 1877.Google Scholar
Eckel, Jan, Die Ambivalenz des Guten: Menschenrechte in der internationalen Politik seit den 1940ern, Göttingen 2014.Google Scholar
Eckel, Jan, Humanitarian Intervention as Global Governance: Western Governments and Suffering ‘Others’ before and after 1990, in Frei, Norbert/Stahl, Daniel/Weinke, Annette (eds.), Human Rights and Humanitarian Intervention: Legitimizing the Use of Force since the 1970s, Göttingen 2017, 6485.Google Scholar
Eckel, Jan/Moyn, Samuel (eds.), The Breakthrough: Human Rights in the 1970s, Philadelphia, PA 2014.Google Scholar
Edmonds, Penelope, Travelling ‘Under Concern’: Quakers James Backhouse and George Washington Walker Tour the Antipodean Colonies, 1832–41, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 40/5 (December 2012), 769788.Google Scholar
Edwards, Paul (ed.), Equiano’s Travels: His Autobiography: The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano or Gustavus Vassa the African, Written by Himself, London 1967.Google Scholar
Eggert, Gerald G., Our Man in Havana: Fitzhugh Lee, Hispanic American Historical Review 47/4 (November 1967), 463485.Google Scholar
Ellis, Markman, The Politics of Sensibility: Race, Gender and Commerce in the Sentimental Novel, Cambridge 1996.Google Scholar
Eltis, David, Economic Growth and the Ending of the Atlantic Slave Trade, Oxford 1987.Google Scholar
Eltis, David, The Volume and Structure of the Transatlantic Slave Trade: A Reassessment, William and Mary Quarterly 58/1 (January 2001), 1746.Google Scholar
Eltis, David/Richardson, David, Atlas of the Transatlantic Slave Trade, New Haven, CT 2010.Google Scholar
Eltis, David/Richardson, David, (eds.), Extending Frontiers: Essays on the New Transatlantic Slave Trade Database, New Haven, CT 2008.Google Scholar
Eltis, David/Richardson, David, A New Assessment of the Transatlantic Slave Trade, in Eltis, David/Richardson, David (eds.), Extending Frontiers. Essays on the New Transatlantic Slave Trade Database, New Haven, CT 2008, 160.Google Scholar
Eltis, David/Walvin, James (eds.), The Abolition of the Atlantic Slave Trade: Origins and Effects in Europe, Africa, and the Americas, Madison, WI 1981.Google Scholar
Emery, F. V., Geography and Imperialism: The Role of Sir Bartle Frere (1815–84), Geographical Journal 150/3 (November 1984), 342350.Google Scholar
Emmer, Pieter C., Abolition of the Abolished: The Illegal Dutch Slave Trade and the Mixed Courts, in Eltis, David/Walvin, James (eds.), The Abolition of the Atlantic Slave Trade: Origins and Effects in Europe, Africa, and the Americas, Madison, WI 1981, 177192.Google Scholar
Emmer, Pieter C., The Dutch Slave Trade, 1500–1850, New York 2006.Google Scholar
Engelhardt, Éduoard, Le droit d’intervention et la Turquie: Étude historique, Revue de droit international et de législation comparée XII (1880), 363388.Google Scholar
Erdem, Y. Hakan, Slavery in the Ottoman Empire and Its Demise, 1800–1909, Basingstoke 1996.Google Scholar
Erskine, Thomas Lord, A Letter to the Earl of Liverpool on the Subject of the Greeks, London 1823.Google Scholar
Evans, Gareth, The Responsibility to Protect: Ending Mass Atrocity Crimes Once and For All, Washington, DC 2008.Google Scholar
Evans, Richard J., The Pursuit of Power, 1815–1914, London 2016.Google Scholar
Everill, Bronwen, Abolition and Empire in Sierra Leone and Liberia, Basingstoke 2013.Google Scholar
Everill, Bronwen/Kaplan, Josiah (eds.), The History and Practice of Humanitarian Intervention and Aid in Africa, Basingstoke 2013.Google Scholar
Fahmy, Khaled, Mehmed Ali: From Ottoman Governor to Ruler of Egypt, Oxford 2009.Google Scholar
Fahrmeir, Andreas, Europa zwischen Restauration, Reform und Revolution 1815–1850, Munich 2012.Google Scholar
Falconbridge, Alexander, An Account of the Slave Trade on the Coast of Africa, London 1788.Google Scholar
Falk, Richard A., Kosovo, World Order, and the Future of International Law, American Journal of Law 93/4 (October 1999), 847857.Google Scholar
Farah, Caesar E., The Politics of Interventionism in Ottoman Lebanon, 1830–1861, London 2000.Google Scholar
Farrell, Stephen, ‘Contrary to the Principle of Justice, Humanity and Sound Policy’: The Slave Trade, Parliamentary Politics and the Abolition Act 1807, in Farrell, Stephen/Unwin, Melanie/Walvin, James (eds.), The British Slave Trade: Abolition, Parliament and People, Edinburgh 2007, 141171.Google Scholar
Farrell, Stephen/Unwin, Melanie/Walvin, James (eds.), The British Slave Trade: Abolition, Parliament and People, Edinburgh 2007.Google Scholar
Fassin, Didier, Humanitarian Reason: A Moral History of the Present, Berkeley, CA 2012.Google Scholar
Fassin, Didier/Pandolfi, Mariella, Introduction: Military and Humanitarian Government in the Age of Intervention, in Fassin, Didier/Pandolfi, Mariella (eds.), Contemporary States of Emergency: The Politics of Military and Humanitarian Intervention, New York 2010, 925.Google Scholar
Fawaz, Leila Tarazi, An Occasion for War: Civil Conflict in Lebanon and Damascus in 1860, Berkeley, CA 1994.Google Scholar
Feenstra, Robert (ed.), Hugo Grotius Mare Liberum 1609–2009, Leiden 2009.Google Scholar
Fehrenbach, Charles W., Moderados and Exaltados: The Liberal Opposition to Ferdinand VII, 1814–1823, Hispanic American Historical Review 50/1 (February 1970), 5269.Google Scholar
Fehrenbacher, Don E., The Slaveholding Republic: An Account of the United States Government’s Relation to Slavery, Oxford 2001.Google Scholar
Feldman, Ilana/Ticktin, Miriam (eds.), In the Name of Humanity: The Government of Threat and Care, Durham, NC 2010.Google Scholar
Fernández, Joaquín Alcaide, Hostes Humani Generis: Pirates, Slavers, and Other Criminals, in Fassbender, Bardo/Peters, Anne (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of the History of International Law, Oxford 2012, 120144.Google Scholar
Ferrer, Ada, Insurgent Cuba: Race, Nation, and Revolution, 1868–1898, Chapel Hill, NC 1999.Google Scholar
Ferris, Elizabeth G., The Challenge to Intervene: A New Role for the United Nations?, Uppsala 1992.Google Scholar
Festa, Lynn, Sentimental Figures of Empire in Eighteenth-Century Britain and France, Baltimore, MD 2006.Google Scholar
Humanity without Feathers, Humanity 1/1 (Autumn 2010), 327.Google Scholar
Field, James A., America and the Mediterranean World 1776–1882, Princeton, NJ 1969.Google Scholar
Fiering, Norman S., Irresistible Compassion: An Aspect of Eighteenth-Century Sympathy and Humanitarianism, Journal of the History of Ideas 37/2 (April–June 1976), 195218.Google Scholar
Findley, Carter Vaugh, The Tanzimat, in Kasaba, Reşat (ed.), The Cambridge History of Turkey, Volume 4, Turkey in the Modern World, Cambridge 2008, 1137.Google Scholar
Fink, Carole, Defending the Rights of Others: The Great Powers, the Jews, and International Minority Protection, 1878–1938, Cambridge 2004.Google Scholar
Finlay, George, A History of Greece from the Conquest by the Romans to the Present Time, vol. VI: The Greek Revolution, pt. I, Oxford 1877.Google Scholar
Finlay, George, A History of Greece from the Conquest by the Romans to the Present Time, vol. VII: The Greek Revolution, pt. II, Oxford 1877.Google Scholar
Finnemore, Martha, Constructing Norms of Humanitarian Intervention, in Katzenstein, Peter J. (ed.), The Culture of National Security: Norms and Identity in World Poltics, New York 1996, 153185.Google Scholar
Finnemore, Martha, The Purpose of Intervention: Changing Beliefs about the Use of Force, Ithaca, NY 2003.Google Scholar
Firro, Kais M., A History of the Druzes, Leiden 1992.Google Scholar
Fisch, Jörg, Africa as Terra Nullius: The Berlin Conference and International Law, in Förster, Stig/Mommsen, Wolfgang J./Robinson, Ronald (eds.), Bismarck, Europe, and Africa: The Berlin Africa Conference 1884–1885 and the Onset of Partition, Oxford 1988, 347375.Google Scholar
Internationalizing Civilization by Dissolving International Society. The Status of Non-European Territories in Nineteenth-Century International Law, in Geyer, Martin H./Paulmann, Johannes (eds.), The Mechanics of Internationalism: Culture, Society, and Politics from the 1840s to the First World War, Oxford 2001, 235257.Google Scholar
Adolf Hitler und das Selbstbestimmungsrecht der Völker, Historische Zeitschrift 290/1 (February 2010), 93118.Google Scholar
Völkerrecht, in Dülffer, Jost/Loth, Wilfried (eds.), Dimensionen internationaler Geschichte, Munich 2012, 151168.Google Scholar
Fischer, Hugo, The Suppression of Slavery in International Law I, International Law Quarterly 3/1 (January 1950), 2851.Google Scholar
Fisher, Miles Mark, Friends of Humanity: A Quaker Anti-Slavery Influence, Church History 4/3 (September 1935), 187202.Google Scholar
Fitzmaurice, Andrew, The Justification of King Leopold II’s Congo Enterprise by Sir Travers Twiss, in Dorsett, Shaunnagh/Hunter, Ian (eds.), Law and Politics in British Colonial Thought: Transpositions of Empire, New York 2010, 109126.Google Scholar
Fitzmaurice, Andrew, Liberalism and Empire in Nineteenth-Century International Law, American Historical Review 117/1 (February 2012), 122140.Google Scholar
Fladeland, Betty, Abolitionist Pressures on the Concert of Europe, 1814–1822, Journal of Modern History 38/4 (December 1966), 355373.Google Scholar
Fladeland, Betty, Men and Brothers: Anglo-American Antislavery Cooperation, Urbana, IL 1972.Google Scholar
Flint, John E. (ed.), The Cambridge History of Africa, vol. 5: From c. 1790 to c. 1870, Cambridge, MA 1976.Google Scholar
Foner, Philip S., A History of Cuba and Its Relation with the United States, vol. 1: 1492–1845: From Conquest of Cuba to La Escalera, New York 1962.Google Scholar
A History of Cuba and Its Relation with the United States, vol. 2: 1845–1895, From the Era of Annexationism to the Outbreak of the Second War of Independence, New York 1963.Google Scholar
Why the United States Went to War with Spain in 1898, Science & Society 32/1 (Winter 1968), 3965.Google Scholar
The Spanish–Cuban–American War and the Birth of American Imperialism 1895–1902, vol. 1: 1895–1898, New York 1972.Google Scholar
The Spanish–Cuban–American War and the Birth of American Imperialism 1895–1902, vol. 2: 1898–1902, New York 1972.Google Scholar
Fonteyne, Jean-Pierre L., The Customary International Law Doctrine of Humanitarian Intervention: Its Current Validity under the U.N. Charter, California Western International Law Journal 4 (1973), 203270.Google Scholar
Forbes, Frederick Edwyn (‘Lieutenant Forbes’), Six Months’ Service in the African Blockade, from April to October, 1848, in Command of H.M.S. Bonetta, London 1849.Google Scholar
Forcade, Olivier/Guelton, Frédéric, L’expédition en Syrie en août 1860–juin 1861, Revue internationale d’histoire militaire 75 (1995), 4962.Google Scholar
Forclaz, Amalia Ribi, Humanitarian Imperialism: The Politics of Anti-Slavery Activism, 1880–1940, Oxford 2015.Google Scholar
Ford, Worthington C., The Work of John Quincy Adams, in Rappaport, Armin (ed.), The Monroe Doctrine, New York 1964, 4048.Google Scholar
Förster, Stig/Mommsen, Wolfgang J./Robinson, Ronald (eds.), Bismarck, Europe, and Africa: The Berlin Africa Conference 1884–1885 and the Onset of Partition, Oxford 1988.Google Scholar
Forsythe, David P., The Humanitarians: The International Committee of the Red Cross, Cambridge 2005.Google Scholar
Fox, William, An Address to the People of Great Britain on the Propriety of Abstaining from West India Sugar and Rum, Birmingham 1791.Google Scholar
Franck, Thomas M./Rodley, Nigel S., After Bangladesh: The Law of Humanitarian Intervention by Military Force, American Journal of International Law 67/2 (April 1973), 275305.Google Scholar
Fraser, Elisabeth A., Delacroix, Art and Patrimony in Post-Revolutionary France, Cambridge 2004.Google Scholar
Fraser, Captain H. A./Tozer, Bishop/Christie, James, The East African Slave Trade and the Measures Proposed for Its Extinction, as Viewed by Residents in Zanzibar, London 1871.Google Scholar
Fraser, Captain H. A./Tozer, Bishop/Christie, James, A Letter to the Honourable Members of the Select Committee of the House of Commons Appointed to Inquire into the Question of the Slave Trade on the East Coast of Africa, Zanzibar 1872.Google Scholar
Friedemann, Peter/Hölscher, Lucian, Internationale, International, Internationalismus, in Brunner, Otto/Conze, Werner/Koselleck, Reinhart (eds.), Geschichtliche Grundbegriffe: Historisches Lexikon zur politisch-sozialen Sprache in Deutschland, vol. 3, Stuttgart 1982.Google Scholar
Fröhlich, Manuel, The Responsibility to Protect: Foundation, Transformation, and Application of an Emerging Norm, in Klose, Fabian (ed.), The Emergence of Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas and Practice from the Nineteenth Century to the Present, Cambridge 2016, 299330.Google Scholar
Fyfe, Christopher, A History of Sierra Leone, London 1962.Google Scholar
Opposition to the Slave Trade as a Preliminary to the European Partition of Africa, in Fyfe, Christopher (ed.), The Theory of Imperialism and the European Partition of Africa, Edinburgh 1967, 129143.Google Scholar
Freed Slave Colonies in West Africa, in Flint, John E. (ed.), The Cambridge History of Africa, vol. 5: From c. 1790 to c. 1870, Cambridge 1976, 170199.Google Scholar
A Short History of Sierra Leone, London 1979.Google Scholar
Gallagher, John, Fowell Buxton and the New African Policy, 1838–1842, Cambridge Historical Journal 10/1 (1950), 3658.Google Scholar
Gallagher, John/Robinson, Ronald, The Imperialism of Free Trade, Economic History Review, New Series 6/1 (August 1953), 115.Google Scholar
Gann, L. H., The Berlin Conference and the Humanitarian Conscience, in Förster, Stig/Mommsen, Wolfgang J./Robinson, Ronald (eds.), Bismarck, Europe, and Africa: The Berlin Africa Conference 1884–1885, Oxford 1988, 321331.Google Scholar
Gates, John M., War-Related Deaths in the Philippines, 1898–1902, Pacific Historical Review 53/3 (August 1984), 367378.Google Scholar
Gavin, R. J., The Bartle Frere Mission to Zanzibar, 1873, Historical Journal 5/2 (June 1962), 122148.Google Scholar
Geggus, David Patrick, The British Government and the Saint Domingue Slave Revolt, 1791–1793, English Historical Review 96/379 (April 1981), 285305.Google Scholar
Geggus, David Patrick, British Opinion and the Emergence of Haiti, 1791–1805, in Walvin, James (ed.), Slavery and British Society, 1776–1846, London 1982, 123149.Google Scholar
Geggus, David Patrick, Haitian Revolutionary Studies, Bloomington, IN 2002.Google Scholar
The World of the Haitian Revolution, Bloomington, IN 2009.Google Scholar
Slave Resistance and Emancipation: The Case of Saint-Domingue, in Drescher, Seymour/Emmer, Pieter C (eds.), Who Abolished Slavery? Slave Revolts and Abolitionism: A Debate with Joao Pedro Marques, New York 2010, 112119.Google Scholar
Genovese, Eugene D., From Rebellion to Revolution: Afro-American Revolts in the Making of the Modern World, Baton Rouge, LA 1979.Google Scholar
Geyer, Martin H., One Language for the World: The Metric System, International Coinage, Gold Standard, and the Rise of Internationalism, in Geyer, Martin H./Paulmann, Johannes (eds.), The Mechanics of Internationalism: Culture, Society, and Politics from the 1840s to the First World War, Oxford 2001, 5592.Google Scholar
Geyer, Martin H./Paulmann, Johannes (eds.), The Mechanics of Internationalism: Culture, Society, and Politics from the 1840s to the First World War, Oxford 2001.Google Scholar
Geyer, Michael, Humanitarianism and Human Rights: A Troubled Rapport, in Klose, Fabian (ed.), The Emergence of Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas and Practice from the Nineteenth Century to the Present, Cambridge 2016, 3155.Google Scholar
Gilbert, Helen/Tiffin, Chris (eds.), Burden or Benefit? Imperial Benevolence and Its Legacies, Bloomington, IN 2008.Google Scholar
Gildea, Robert, Barricades and Borders: Europe 1800–1914, Oxford 2003.Google Scholar
Gilderhus, Mark T., The Monroe Doctrine: Meanings and Implications, Presidential Studies Quarterly 36/1 (March 2006), 516.Google Scholar
Gilje, Paul A., ‘Free Trade and Sailors’ Rights’: The Rhetoric of the War of 1812, Journal of the Early Republic 30/1 (Spring 2010), 123.Google Scholar
Gilliland, C. Herbert, Voyage to a Thousand Cares: Master’s Mate Lawrence with the African Squadron, 1844–1846, Annapolis, MD 2004.Google Scholar
Gladstone, William E., Bulgarian Horrors and the Question of the East, London 1876.Google Scholar
Gladstone, William E., Lessons in Massacre: The Conduct of the Turkish Government in and about Bulgaria, London 1877.Google Scholar
Gleave, J., The Triumph of Justice, or British Valour Displayed in the Cause of Humanity: Being an Interesting Narrative of the Recent Expedition to Algiers, Manchester 1816.Google Scholar
Glenny, Misha, The Balkans 1804–1999: Nationalism, War and the Great Powers, London 1999.Google Scholar
Goodman, Ryan, Humanitarian Intervention and Pretexts for War, American Journal of International Law 100/1 (January 2006), 107141.Google Scholar
Gong, Gerrit W., The Standard of ‘Civilization’ in International Society, Oxford 1984.Google Scholar
Götz, Norbert, Rationales of Humanitarianism: The Case of British Relief to Germany, 1805–1815, Journal of Modern European History 12/2 (2014), 186199.Google Scholar
Gough, Barry, Pax Britannica: Ruling the Waves and Keeping the Peace before Armageddon, Basingstoke 2014.Google Scholar
Graham, Malbone W., Humanitarian Intervention in International Law as Related to the Practice of the United States, Michigan Law Review 22/4 (February 1924), 312328.Google Scholar
Grant, Kevin, Christian Critics of Empire: Missionaries, Lantern Lectures, and the Congo Reform Campaign in Britain, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 29/2 (May 2001), 2758.Google Scholar
Grant, Kevin, A Civilised Savagery: Britain and the New Slaveries in Africa, 1884–1926, New York 2005.Google Scholar
Green, Abigail, Intervening in the Jewish Question, 1840–1878, in Simms, Brendan/Trim, David J. B. (eds.), Humanitarian Intervention: A History, Cambridge 2011, 139158.Google Scholar
Humanitarianism in Nineteenth-Century Context: Religious, Gendered, National, Historical Journal 57/4 (December 2014), 11571175.Google Scholar
From Protection to Humanitarian Intervention? Enforcing Jewish Rights in Romania and Morocco around 1880, in Klose, Fabian (ed.), The Emergence of Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas and Practice from the Nineteenth Century to the Present, Cambridge 2016, 142161.Google Scholar
Grewe, Wilhelm G., Epochen der Völkerrechtsgeschichte, Baden-Baden 1984.Google Scholar
Grewe, Wilhelm G., The Epochs of International Law, Berlin 2000.Google Scholar
Grotius, Hugo, On the Law of War and Peace (Student Edition), ed. Neff, Stephen C., Cambridge 2012.Google Scholar
Guyatt, Mary, The Wedgwood Slave Medallion: Values in Eighteenth-Century Design, Journal of Design History 13/2 (2000), 93105.Google Scholar
Hafner, D. L., Castlereagh, the Balance of Power, and ‘Non-Intervention’, Australian Journal of Politics and History 26/1 (1980), 7184.Google Scholar
Halliday, Fred, Three Concepts of Internationalism, International Affairs 64/2 (Spring 1988), 187198.Google Scholar
Halttunen, Karen, Humanitarianism and the Pornography of Pain in Anglo-American Culture, American Historical Review 100/2 (April 1995), 303334.Google Scholar
Hamilton, Douglas/Blyth, Robert L. (eds.), Representing Slavery: Art, Artefacts and Archives in the Collection of the National Maritime Museum, Aldershot 2007.Google Scholar
Hamilton, Keith, Zealots and Helots: The Slave Trade Department of the Nineteenth-Century Foreign Office, in Hamilton, Keith/Salmon, Patrick (eds.), Slavery, Diplomacy and Empire: Britain and the Suppression of the Slave Trade, 1807–1975, Eastbourne 2009, 2041.Google Scholar
Hamilton, Keith/Salmon, Patrick (eds.), Slavery, Diplomacy and Empire: Britain and the Suppression of the Slave Trade, 1807–1975, Eastbourne 2009.Google Scholar
Hamilton, Richard F., President McKinley, War and Empire, vol. 1: President McKinley and the Coming of War, 1898, New Brunswick, NJ 2006.Google Scholar
Hamilton, Robert, An Address Intended to Have Been Delivered at a Meeting of the Inhabitants of Ipswich for the Purpose of Considering the Propriety of Petitioning Parliament for an Abolition of the Slave Trade, Ipswich, 17 February 1792.Google Scholar
Hampsher-Monk, Iain, Edmund Burke’s Changing Justification for Intervention, Historical Journal 48/1 (March 2005), 65100.Google Scholar
Handler, Jerome S., Survivors of the Middle Passage: Life Histories of Enslaved Africans in British America, Slavery & Abolition 23/1 (April 2002), 2556.Google Scholar
Burke’s Counter-Revolutionary Writings, in Dwan, David/Insole, Christopher M (eds.), The Cambridge Companion to Edmund Burke, Cambridge 2012, 209220.Google Scholar
Hanioğlu, M. Şükrü, A Brief History of the Late Ottoman Empire, Princeton, NJ 2008.Google Scholar
Harcourt, William Vernon, Letters by Historicus on Some Questions of International Law, London 1863.Google Scholar
Harms, Robert/Freamon, Bernard K./Blight, David W. (eds.), Indian Ocean Slavery in the Age of Abolition, New Haven, CT 2013.Google Scholar
Harris, David, Britain and the Bulgarian Horrors of 1876, Chicago, IL 1939.Google Scholar
Haskell, Chas. C. & Son (ed.), The American–Spanish War: A History by the War Leaders, Norwich 1899.Google Scholar
Haskell, Thomas L., Capitalism and the Origins of Humanitarian Sensibility, pt. 1, American Historical Review 90/2 (April 1985), 339361.Google Scholar
Haskell, Thomas L., Capitalism and the Origins of Humanitarian Sensibility, pt. 2, American Historical Review 90/3 (June 1985), 547566.Google Scholar
Hassan, Farooq, Realpolitik in International Law: After Tanzanian–Ugandan Conflict: ‘Humanitarian Intervention’ Reexamined, Willamette Law Review 17 (1981), 859912.Google Scholar
Haynes, Sam W., Anglophobia and the Annexation of Texas: The Quest for National Security, in Haynes, Sam W./Morris, Christopher (eds.), Manifest Destiny and Empire: American Antebellum Expansionism, College Station, TX 2008, 115145.Google Scholar
Haynes, Sam W./Morris, Christopher (eds.), Manifest Destiny and Empire: American Antebellum Expansionism, College Station, TX 2008.Google Scholar
Heale, M. J., Humanitarianism in the Early Republic: The Moral Reformers of New York, 1776–1825, Journal of American Studies 2/2 (October 1968), 161175.Google Scholar
Healy, David, The United States in Cuba 1898–1902: Generals, Politicians, and the Search for Policy, Madison, WI 1963.Google Scholar
Heartfield, James, The Aborigines’ Protection Society: Humanitarian Imperialism in Australia, New Zealand, Fiji, Canada, South Africa, and the Congo, 1836–1909, London 2011.Google Scholar
Heerten, Lasse, The Biafran War and Postcolonial Humanitarianism: Spectacles of Suffering, Cambridge 2017.Google Scholar
Hehir, Aidan, Humanitarian Intervention after Kosovo: Iraq, Dafur and the Record of Global Civil Society, Basingstoke 2008.Google Scholar
Hehir, Aidan, Humanitarian Intervention: An Introduction, Basingstoke 2010.Google Scholar
Hehir, Aidan, The Responsibility to Protect: Rhetoric, Reality and the Future of Humanitarian Intervention, Basingstoke 2012.Google Scholar
Hehir, Aidan/Murray, Robert W. (eds.), Protecting Human Rights in the 21st Century, London 2017.Google Scholar
Helfman, Tara, The Court of Vice-Admiralty at Sierra Leone and the Abolition of the West African Slave Trade, Yale Law Journal 115/5 (March 2006), 11221156.Google Scholar
Helly, Dorothy O., ‘Informed’ Opinion on Tropical Africa in Great Britain 1860–1890, African Affairs 68/272 (July 1969), 195217.Google Scholar
Hendrick, George, Henry Salt: Humanitarian Reformer and Man of Letters, Urbana, IL 1977.Google Scholar
Henkin, Louis, Kosovo and the Law of ‘Humanitarian Intervention’, American Journal of International Law 93/4 (October 1999), 824828.Google Scholar
Heraclides, Alexis, Humanitarian Intervention in International Law 1830–1939: The Debate, Journal of the History of International Law 16 (2014), 2662.Google Scholar
Heraclides, Alexis/Dialla, Ada, Humanitarian Intervention in the Long Nineteenth Century: Setting the Precedent, Manchester 2015.Google Scholar
Herren, Madeleine, Hintertüren zur Macht: Internationalismus und modernisierungsorientierte Außenpolitik in Belgien, der Schweiz und den USA, 1865–1914, Munich 2000.Google Scholar
Governmental Internationalism and the Beginning of a New World Order in the Late Nineteenth Century, in Geyer, Martin H./Paulmann, Johannes (eds.), The Mechanics of Internationalism: Culture, Society, and Politics from the 1840s to the First World War, Oxford 2001, 121144.Google Scholar
Herring, George C., From Colony to Superpower: U.S. Foreign Relations since 1776, Oxford 2008.Google Scholar
Herrmann, Friedrich, Ueber die Seeräuber im Mittelmeer und ihre Vertilgung: Ein Völkerwunsch an den erlauchten Kongress in Wien, Lübeck 1815.Google Scholar
Hershey, Amos S., Intervention and the Recognition of Cuban Independence, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 11 (May 1898), 5380.Google Scholar
Heydemann, Günther, The Vienna System between 1815 and 1848 and the Disputed Antirevolutionary Strategy: Repression, Reforms, or Constitutions?, in Krüger, Peter/Schroeder, Paul W. (eds.), The Transformation of European Politics, 1763–1848’: Episode or Model in Modern History?, Münster 2002, 187203.Google Scholar
Higman, B. W., The Sugar Revolution, Economic History Review 53/2 (May 2000), 213236.Google Scholar
Hildebrand, Klaus, No Intervention: Die Pax Britannica und Preußen 1865/66–1869/70. Eine Untersuchung zur englischen Weltpolitik im 19. Jahrhundert, Munich 1997.Google Scholar
Hill, Richard, The Prizes of War: The Naval Prize System in the Napoleonic Wars, 1793–1815, Stroud 1998.Google Scholar
Hillgruber, Christian, Humanitäre Intervention, Grossmachtpolitik und Völkerrecht, Der Staat 40 (2001), 165191.Google Scholar
Hilton, Boyd, 1807 and All That: Why Britain Outlawed Her Slave Trade, in Peterson, Derek R. (ed.), Abolitionism and Imperialism in Britain, Africa, and the Atlantic, Athens, OH 2010, 6383.Google Scholar
Hilton, Sylvia L./Ickringill, Steve J. S. (eds.), European Perceptions of the Spanish–American War of 1898, Bern 1999.Google Scholar
Hoare, Prince, Memoirs of Granville Sharp, London 1820.Google Scholar
Hochschild, Adam, King Leopold’s Ghost: A Story of Greed, Terror, and Heroism in Colonial Africa, New York 1999.Google Scholar
Bury the Chains: The British Struggle to Abolish Slavery, Basingstoke 2005.Google Scholar
Hoffman, Peter J./Weiss, Thomas G., Humanitarianism, War, and Politics: Solferino to Syria and Beyond, Lanham, MD 2018.Google Scholar
Hoffmann, Stefan-Ludwig, Einführung: Zur Genealogie der Menschenrechte, in Hoffmann, Stefan-Ludwig (ed.), Moralpolitik: Geschichte der Menschenrechte im 20. Jahrhundert, Göttingen 2010, 737.Google Scholar
Hoffmann, Stefan-Ludwig,Human Rights and History, Past & Present, 22 July 2016, https://academic.oup.com/past/article-abstract/232/1/279/1752430Google Scholar
Hoffmann, Stefan-Ludwig (ed.), Moralpolitik: Geschichte der Menschenrechte im 20. Jahrhundert, Göttingen 2010.Google Scholar
Holbraad, Carsten, The Concert of Europe: A Study in German and British International Theory 1815–1914, London 1970.Google Scholar
Holland, Robert, Blue-Water Empire: The British in the Mediterranean since 1800, London 2013.Google Scholar
Holsti, Kalevi J., Governance without Government: Polyarchy in Nineteenth-Century European International Politics, in Rosenau, James N./Czempiel, Ernst-Otto (eds.), Governance without Government: Order and Change in World Politics, Cambridge 1992, 3057.Google Scholar
Holzgrefe, Jeff L., The Humanitarian Intervention Debate, in Holzgrefe, Jeff L./Keohane, Robert O. (eds.), Humanitarian Intervention: Ethical, Legal, and Political Dilemmas, Cambridge 2004.Google Scholar
Holzgrefe, Jeff L./Keohane, Robert O., Humanitarian Intervention: Ethical, Legal, and Political Dilemmas, Cambridge 2004.Google Scholar
Honour, Hugh, The Image of the Black in Western Art, vol. 4: From the American Revolution to World War I: Slaves and Liberators, Cambridge, MA 1989.Google Scholar
Hopkins, Antony G., Property Rights and Empire Building: Britain’s Annexation of Lagos, 1861, Journal of Economic History 40/4 (December 1980), 777798.Google Scholar
Hopper, Matthew S., Slaves of One Master: Globalization and Slavery in Arabia in the Age of Empire, New Haven, CT 2015.Google Scholar
Howard, Edward, Memoirs of Admiral Sir Sidney Smith, vol. 2, London 1839.Google Scholar
Howell, Raymond, The Royal Navy and the Slave Trade, London 1987.Google Scholar
Hudson, Nicholas, ‘Britons Never Will Be Slaves’: National Myth, Conservatism, and the Beginning of British Antislavery, Eighteenth-Century Studies 34/4 (Summer 2001), 559576.Google Scholar
Hughes, Thomas S., An Address to the People of England in the Cause of the Greeks, Occasioned by the Late Inhuman Massacres in the Isle of Scio & c., London 1822.Google Scholar
Hugill, Peter J., Global Communications since 1844: Geopolitics and Technology, Baltimore, MD 1999.Google Scholar
Hume, David, Enquiries Concerning the Human Understanding and Concerning the Principles of Morals, ed. Selby-Bigge, L. A., 2nd ed., Oxford 1902.Google Scholar
Humphreys, A. R., ‘The Friend of Mankind’ (1700–60): An Aspect of Eighteenth-Century Sensibility, Review of English Studies 24/95 (July 1948), 203218.Google Scholar
Hunt, Barry Dennis, The Eastern Question in British Naval Policy and Strategy, 1789–1913, in Vacalopoulos, Apostolos E./Svolopoulos, Constantinos D./Király, Béla K. (eds.), Southeast European Maritime Commerce and Naval Policies from the Mid-Eighteenth Century to 1914, Boulder, CO 1988, 4575.Google Scholar
Hunt, Lynn, Inventing Human Rights: A History, New York 2007.Google Scholar
Hunt, Lynn, The Paradoxical Origins of Human Rights, in Wasserstrom, Jeffrey N./Grandin, Greg/Hunt, Lynn/Young, Marilyn B. (eds.), Human Rights and Revolution, Lanham, MD 2007, 320.Google Scholar
Huzzey, Richard, Freedom Burning: Anti-Slavery and Empire in Victorian Britain, Ithaca, NY 2012.Google Scholar
Huzzey, Richard, Minding Civilisation and Humanity in 1867: A Case Study in British Imperial Culture and Victorian Anti-Slavery, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 40/5 (December 2012), 807825.Google Scholar
Huzzey, Richard/Miller, Henry, Petitions, Parliament, and Political Culture: Petitioning the House of Commons, 1780–1918, Past & Present 248 (August 2020), 123-164.Google Scholar
Hyam, Ronald, Britain’s Imperial Century, 1815–1914: A Study of Empire and Expansion, London 1993.Google Scholar
Ignalls, John J. (ed.), America’s War for Humanity Related in Story and Picture, Embracing a Complete History of Cuba’s Struggle for Liberty, and the Glorious Heroism of America’s Soldiers and Sailors, New York 1898.Google Scholar
Incognitus, Ricardus, An Address to the People of the British Dominions, on Behalf of Humanity, and of the Suffering Greeks, London 1825.Google Scholar
Ingersoll, Edward (ed.), A Digest of the Laws of the United States of America from March 4th, 1789, to May 15th, 1820, Philadelphia, PA 1821.Google Scholar
Inikori, Joseph E., Market Structure and the Profits of the British African Trade in the Late Eighteenth Century, Journal of Economic History 41/4 (December 1981), 745776.Google Scholar
Inikori, Joseph E., Slavery and Atlantic Commerce, 1650–1800, American Economic Review 82/2 (May 1992), 151157.Google Scholar
International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty (ICISS) (ed.), The Responsibility to Protect, Ottawa 2001.Google Scholar
International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty (ICISS) The Responsibility to Protect: Research, Bibliography, Background. Supplementary Volume to the Report of the ICISS, Ottawa 2001.Google Scholar
International Law Association (ed.), Report of the Fifty-Second Conference Held at Helsinki, August 14th to August 20th, 1966, London 1967.Google Scholar
Iriye, Akira, Global Community: The Role of International Organizations in the Making of the Contemporary World, Berkeley, CA 2002.Google Scholar
Jack, Malcolm, Destruction and Regeneration: Lisbon, 1755, in Braun, Theodore E. D./Radner, John B. (eds.), The Lisbon Earthquake of 1755: Representation and Reactions, Oxford 2005, 720.Google Scholar
Jackson, Maurice, Let This Voice Be Heard: Anthony Benezet, Father of Atlantic Abolitionism, Philadelphia, PA 2009.Google Scholar
Jacob, Cecilia/Mennecke, Martin (eds.), Implementing the Responsibility to Protect: A Future Agenda, Abingdon 2020.Google Scholar
Jameson, Robert, Letters from the Havana during the Year 1820: Containing an Account of the Present State of the Island of Cuba and Observations on the Slave Trade, London 1821.Google Scholar
Janzekovic, John, The Use of Force in Humanitarian Intervention: Morality and Practicalities, Aldershot 2006.Google Scholar
Jarrett, Mark, The Congress of Vienna and Its Legacy: War and Great Power Diplomacy after Napoleon, London 2014.Google Scholar
Jelavich, Barbara, History of the Balkans: Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries, vol. 1, Cambridge 1983.Google Scholar
Jelavich, Barbara, Russia’s Balkan Entanglements 1806–1914, Cambridge 1991.Google Scholar
Jennings, Judith, The Business of Abolishing the British Slave Trade 1783–1807, London 1997.Google Scholar
Jennings, Lawrence C., France, Great Britain, and the Repression of the Slave Trade, 1841–1845, French Historical Studies 10/1 (Spring 1977), 101125.Google Scholar
The French Press and Great Britain’s Campaign against the Slave Trade, 1830–1848, Revue française d’histoire d’outre-mer LXVII/246–247 (1980), 524.Google Scholar
Slave Trade Repression and the Abolition of French Slavery, in Daget, Serge (ed.), De la traite à l’esclavage: Actes du Colloque international sur la traite des Noirs, Nantes 1988, 359372.Google Scholar
French Anti-Slavery under the Restoration: The Société de la morale chrétienne, Revue française d’histoire d’outre-mer 81/304 (1994), 321–331. Google Scholar
French Anti-Slavery: The Movement for the Abolition of Slavery in France 1802–1848, Cambridge 2000.Google Scholar
Jessup, Philip C., The Defense of Oppressed Peoples, American Journal of International Law 32/1 (January 1938), 116119.Google Scholar
Joannides, Paul Colin, Delacroix, Byron and the Greek War of Independence, Burlington Magazine 125/965 (August 1983), 495500.Google Scholar
Johnson, John J., A Hemisphere Apart: The Foundations of United States Policy toward Latin America, Baltimore, MD 1990.Google Scholar
Johnson, Samuel, A Dictionary of the English Language, vol. 1, London 1755.Google Scholar
Jones, Wilbur Devereux, The Origins and Passage of Lord Aberdeen’s Act, Hispanic American Historical Review 42/4 (November 1962), 502520.Google Scholar
Joseph, Gilbert M., From Caste to Class War: The Historiography of Modern Yucatán (c. 1750–1940), Hispanic American Historical Review 65/1 (February 1985), 111134.Google Scholar
Joseph, Gilbert M., The United States, Feuding Elites, and Rural Revolt in Yucatán, 1836–1915, in Nugent, Daniel (ed.), Rural Revolt in Mexico: US Intervention and the Domain of Subaltern Politics, Durham, NC 1998, 173206.Google Scholar
Journal Printing Company (ed.), Cartoons of the Spanish–American War by Bart with Dates of Important Events from the Minneapolis Journal, Minneapolis, MN 1899.Google Scholar
Kampmann, Christoph, Das ‘Westfälische System’, die Glorreiche Revolution und die Interventionsproblematik, Historisches Jahrbuch 131 (2011), 6592.Google Scholar
The English Crisis, Emperor Leopold, and the Origins of the Dutch Intervention in 1688, Historical Journal 55/2 (June 2012), 521532.Google Scholar
Kampmann, Christoph/Niggemann, Ulrich (eds.), Sicherheit in der Frühen Neuzeit: Norm, Praxis, Repräsentation, Cologne 2013 (Frühneuzeit Impulse 2).Google Scholar
Kaplan, Lawrence S., The Monroe Doctrine and the Truman Doctrine: The Case of Greece, Journal of the Early Republic 13/1 (Spring 1993), 121.Google Scholar
Karns, Margaret P./Mingst, Karen A., International Organizations: The Politics and Process of Global Governance, Boulder, CO 2010.Google Scholar
Kaufmann, Chaim D./Pape, Robert A., Explaining Costly International Moral Action: Britain’s Sixty-Year Campaign against the Slave Trade, International Organization 53/4 (Autumn 1999), 631668.Google Scholar
Kayaoğlu, Turan, Legal Imperialism: Sovereignty and Extraterritoriality in Japan, the Ottoman Empire, and China, Cambridge 2010.Google Scholar
Keck, Margaret E./Sikkink, Kathryn, Activists beyond Borders: Advocacy Networks in International Politics, Ithaca, NY 1998.Google Scholar
Keene, Edward, A Case Study of the Construction of International Hierarchy: British Treaty-Making against the Slave Trade in the Early Nineteenth Century, International Organization 61/2 (Spring 2007), 311339.Google Scholar
Keene, Edward, International Hierarchy and the Origins of the Modern Practice of International Intervention, Review of International Studies 39/5 (December 2013), 10771090.Google Scholar
Kendrick, Thomas D., The Lisbon Earthquake, London 1956.Google Scholar
Kern, Holger Lutz, Strategies of Legal Change: Great Britain, International Law, and the Abolition of the Transatlantic Slave Trade, Journal of the History of International Law 6/2 (2004), 233258.Google Scholar
Kerschbaumer, Florian, Sir Sidney Smith und die Barbaresken-Frage am Wiener Kongress, in Kerschbaumer, Florian/Stauber, Reinhard/Koschier, Marion (eds.), Mächtepolitik und Friedenssicherung: Zur politischen Kultur Europas im Zeichen des Wiener Kongresses, Berlin 2014, 89105.Google Scholar
Kerschbaumer, Florian/Schönhärl, Korinna, Der Wiener Kongress als ‘Kinderstube’ des Philhellenismus: Das Beispiel des Bankiers Jean-Gabriel Eynard, in Meyer, Anne-Rose (ed.), Vormärz und Philhellenismus, Forum Vormärz Forschung 18 (2012), 99127.Google Scholar
Keys, Barbara, Reclaiming American Virtue: The Human Rights Revolutuion of the 1970s, Cambridge, MA 2014.Google Scholar
Kielstra, Paul Michael, The Politics of Slave Trade Suppression in Britain and France, 1814–48: Diplomacy, Morality and Economics, London 2000.Google Scholar
King, James Ferguson, The Latin-American Republics and the Suppression of the Slave Trade, Hispanic American Historical Review 24/3 (August 1944), 387411.Google Scholar
Kiple, Kenneth F., The Caribbean Slave: A Biological History, Cambridge, MA 1984.Google Scholar
Kiple, Kenneth F./Higgins, Brian T., Mortality Caused by Dehydration during the Middle Passage, Social Science History 13/4 (Winter 1989), 421437.Google Scholar
Kipling, Rudyard, Rudyard Kipling’s Verse: Definitive Edition, London 1929.Google Scholar
Kisirwani, Maroun, Foreign Interference and Religious Animosity in Lebanon, Journal of Contemporary History 15/4 (October 1980), 685700.Google Scholar
Klein, Herbert S.,The Atlantic Slave Trade, Cambridge 2010.Google Scholar
Klein, Herbert S./Engerman, Stanley L., Long-Term Trends in African Mortality in the Transatlantic Slave Trade, Slavery & Abolition 18/1 (1997), 3648.Google Scholar
Klein, Herbert S./Engerman, Stanley L./Haines, Robin/Shlomowitz, Ralph, Transoceanic Mortality: The Slave Trade in Comparative Perspective, William and Mary Quarterly 58/1 (January 2001), 93118.Google Scholar
Klein, Natalie, ‘L’humanité, le christianisme, et la liberté’: Die internationale Philhellenische Vereinsbewegung der 1820er Jahre, Mainz 2000.Google Scholar
Klingberg, Frank J., The Anti-Slavery Movement in England: A Study in English Humanitarianism, New Haven, CT 1926.Google Scholar
Klingberg, Frank J., The Evolution of the Humanitarian Spirit in Eighteenth-Century England, Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 66/3 (July 1942), 260278.Google Scholar
Kloepfer, Stephen, The Syrian Crisis, 1860–61: A Case Study in Classic Humanitarian Intervention, Canadian Yearbook of International Law XXIII (1985), 246260.Google Scholar
Klose, Fabian, Menschenrechte im Schatten kolonialer Gewalt: Die Dekolonisierungskriege in Kenia und Algerien 1945–1962, Munich 2009.Google Scholar
Human Rights in the Shadow of Colonial Violence: The Wars of Independence in Kenya and Algeria, Philadelphia, PA 2013.Google Scholar
Humanitäre Intervention und internationale Gerichtsbarkeit – Verflechtung militärischer und juristischer Implementierungsmaßnahmen zu Beginn des 19. Jahrhunderts, Militärgeschichtliche Zeitschrift 72/1 (2013), 121.Google Scholar
To Maintain the Law of Nature and of Nations’ – Der Wiener Kongress und die Ursprünge der humanitären Intervention, Geschichte in Wissenschaft und Unterricht 3/4 (March–April 2014), 217237.Google Scholar
Frieden durch Krieg? Zur Janusköpfigkeit militärischer Interventionspraxis im langen 19. Jahrhundert, in Mayoraz, Sandrine/Schenk, Frithjof Benjamin/Mäder, Ueli (eds.), Hundert Jahre Basler Friedenskongress (1912–2012): Die erhoffte ‘Verbrüderung der Völker’, Basel 2015, 201212.Google Scholar
Humanitäre Intervention und Prävention in der internationalen Politik vom 19. bis ins 21. Jahrhundert, in Hannig, Nicolai/Thiessen, Malte (eds.), Vorsorge in der Moderne: Akteure, Räume und Praktiken, Schriftenreihe der Vierteljahrshefte für Zeitgeschichte, vol. 115, Berlin 2017, 2744.Google Scholar
Protecting Universal Rights through Intervention: International Law Debates from the 1930s to the 1980s, in Frei, Norbert/Stahl, Daniel/Weinke, Annette (eds.), Human Rights and Humanitarian Intervention: Legitimizing the Use of Force since the 1970s, Göttingen 2017, 169184.Google Scholar
A War of Justice and Humanity’: Abolition and Establishing Humanity as an International Norm, in Klose, Fabian/Thulin, Mirjam (eds.), Humanity:Google Scholar
A History of European Concepts in Practice from the Sixteenth Century to the Present, Göttingen 2017, 169186.Google Scholar
Humanitarian Intervention as an Entangled History of Humanitarianism and Human Rights, in Barnett, Michael (ed.), Humanitarianism and Human Rights: A World of Differences?, Cambridge 2020, 127139.Google Scholar
Legal Practitioners – Nineteenth Century International Jurisdiction and the Ambiguous Roles of the Members of the Mixed Commissions, in Payk, Marcus M/Priemel, Kim Christian (eds.), Crafting the International Order: Practitioners and Practices of International Law since c. 1800, Oxford 2021, 4865.Google Scholar
Klose, Fabian (ed.), The Emergence of Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas and Practice from the Nineteenth Century to the Present, Cambridge 2016.Google Scholar
Klose, Fabian/Thulin, Mirjam (eds.), Humanity: A History of European Concepts in Practice from the Sixteenth Century to the Present, Göttingen 2017.Google Scholar
Klose, Fabian/Thulin, Mirjam, Introduction: European Concepts and Practices of Humanity in Historical Perspective, in Klose, Fabian/Thulin, Mirjam (eds.), Humanity: A History of European Concepts in Practice from the Sixteenth Century to the Present, Göttingen 2017, 925.Google Scholar
Knight, Franklin W., The Haitian Revolution, American Historical Review 105/1 (February 2000), 103115.Google Scholar
Knudsen, Tonny Brems, The History of Humanitarian Intervention: The Rule or the Exception?, Paper for the 50th ISA Annual Convention, 15–18 February 2009.Google Scholar
Köchler, Hans, The Concept of Humanitarian Intervention in the Context of Modern Power Politics: Is the Revival of the Doctrine of ‘Just War’ Compatible with the International Rule of Law?, Vienna 2001.Google Scholar
Kontorovich, Eugene, The Constitutionality of International Courts: The Forgotten Precedent of Slave Trade Tribunals, University of Pennsylvania Law Review 158/1 (December 2009), 39115.Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, Martti, Lauterpacht: The Victorian Tradition in International Law, European Journal of International Law 8/2 (1997), 215263.Google Scholar
The Gentle Civilizer of Nations: The Rise and Fall of International Law 1870–1960, Cambridge 2001.Google Scholar
Ković, Miloš, Disraeli and the Eastern Question, Oxford 2011.Google Scholar
Kramer, Paul A., Race-Making and Colonial Violence in the U.S. Empire: The Philippine–American War as Race War, Diplomatic History 30/2 (April 2006), 169210.Google Scholar
Krasner, Stephen D., Westphalia and All That, in Goldstein, Judith/Keohane, Robert O. (eds.), Ideas and Foreign Policy: Beliefs, Institutions, and Political Change, Ithaca, NY 1993, 235264.Google Scholar
Sovereignty and Intervention, in Lyons, Gene M/Mastanduno, Michael (eds.), Beyond Westphalia? State Sovereignty and International Intervention, Baltimore, MD 1995, 228249.Google Scholar
Kraus, Michael, Slavery Reform in the Eighteenth Century: An Aspect of Transatlantic Intellectual Cooperation, Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 60/1 (January 1936), 5366.Google Scholar
Eighteenth Century Humanitarianism: Collaboration between Europe and America, Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 60/3 (July 1936), 270286.Google Scholar
The Atlantic Civilization: Eighteenth-Century Origins, Ithaca, NY 1966.Google Scholar
Krause, Dan/Peters, Daniel (eds.), Southern Democracies and the Responsibility to Protect: Perspectives from India, Brazil and South Africa, Baden-Baden 2017.Google Scholar
Kreß, Claus, Major Post-Westphalian Shifts and Some Important Neo-Westphalian Hesitations in the State Practice on the International Law on the Use of Force, Journal on the Use of Force and International Law 1/1 (2014), 1154.Google Scholar
Kroll, Stefan, The Legal Justification of International Intervention: Theories of Community and Admissibility, in Klose, Fabian (ed.), The Emergence of Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas and Practice from the Nineteenth Century to the Present, Cambridge 2016, 7388.Google Scholar
Krüger, Peter/Schroeder, Paul W. (eds.), The Transformation of European Politics, 1763–1848: Episode or Model in Modern History?, Münster 2002.Google Scholar
Kukovansky, Mlada, American Identity and Neutral Rights from Independence to the War of 1812, International Organization 51/2 (Spring 1997), 209243.Google Scholar
Kurzweg, Rudolf, Die Heilige Allianz und das Interventionssystem des Vertrages von Troppau, Jahrbücher für Geschichte Osteuropas, Neue Folge 3 (1955), 141160.Google Scholar
Laderman, Charles, The Invasion of the United States by an Englishman: E. D. Morel and the Anglo-American Intervention in the Congo, in Mulligan, William/Bric, Maurice (eds.), A Global History of Anti-Slavery in the Nineteenth Century, Basingstoke 2013, 171197.Google Scholar
Laderman, Charles, Sharing the Burden: The Armenian Question, Humanitarian Intervention and Anglo-American Visions of Global Order, New York 2019.Google Scholar
LaFeber, Walter, The New Empire: An Interpretation of American Expansion 1860–1898, Ithaca, NY 1998.Google Scholar
Laidlaw, Zoe, Investigating Empire: Humanitarians, Reform and the Commission of Eastern Inquiry, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 40/5 (December 2012), 749768.Google Scholar
Lambert, Andrew, Slavery, Free Trade and Naval Strategy, 1840–1860, in Hamilton, Keith/Salmon, Patrick (eds.), Slavery, Diplomacy and Empire: Britain and the Suppression of the Slave Trade, 1807–1975, Eastbourne 2009, 6580.Google Scholar
Lambert, Frank, The Barbary Wars: American Independence in the Atlantic World, New York 2005.Google Scholar
Landry, Harral E., Slavery and the Slave Trade in Atlantic Diplomacy, 1850–1861, Journal of Southern History 27/2 (May 1961), 184207.Google Scholar
Lane, Calvin, The African Squadron: The U.S. Navy and the Slave Trade, 1820–1862, Log of Mystic Seaport 50/4 (Spring 1999), 8698.Google Scholar
Langley, Lester D., The Cuban Policy of the United States: A Brief History, New York 1968.Google Scholar
Slavery, Reform, and American Policy in Cuba, 1823–1878, Revista de Historia de América 65/66 (January–December 1968), 7184.Google Scholar
The Banana Wars: United States Intervention in the Caribbean 1898–1934, Lexington, MA 1985.Google Scholar
Lappenküper, Ulrich/Marcowitz, Reiner (eds.), Macht und Recht: Völkerrecht in den internationalen Beziehungen, Paderborn 2010.Google Scholar
Lapsansky, Philip, Graphic Discord: Abolitionist and Antiabolitionist Images, in Yellin, Jean Fagan/Van Horne, John C. (eds.), The Abolitionist Sisterhood: Women’s Political Culture in Antebellum America, Ithaca, NY 1994, 201230.Google Scholar
Laqua, Daniel, The Tensions of Internationalism: Transnational Anti-Slavery in the 1880s and 1890s, International History Review 33/4 (December 2011), 705726.Google Scholar
The Age of Internationalism and Belgium, 1880–1930: Peace, Progress and Prestige, Manchester 2013.Google Scholar
Inside the Humanitarian Cloud: Causes and Motivations to Help Friends and Strangers, Journal of Modern European History 12/2 (2014), 175185.Google Scholar
Laqueur, Thomas W., Bodies, Details, and the Humanitarian Narrative, in Hunt, Lynn (ed.), The New Cultural History, Berkeley, CA 1989, 176204.Google Scholar
Laqueur, Thomas W., Mourning, Pity, and the Work of Narrative in the Making of ‘Humanity’, in Wilson, Richard Ashby/Brown, Richard D. (eds.), Humanitarianism and Suffering: The Mobilization of Empathy, Cambridge 2009, 3157.Google Scholar
Laukötter, Sebastian, Zwischen Einmischung und Nothilfe: Das Problem der ‘humanitären Intervention’ aus ideengeschichtlicher Perspektive, Berlin 2014.Google Scholar
Lauren, Paul Gordon, Power and Prejudice: The Politics and Diplomacy of Racial Discrimination, Boulder, CO 1996.Google Scholar
The Evolution of Interventional Human Rights: Vision Seen, Philadelphia, PA 2011.Google Scholar
Lauterpacht, Hersch, The Law of Nations, the Law of Nature and the Rights of Man, in: Transactions of the Grotius Society 29: Problems of Peace and War, Papers Read before the Society in the Year 1943, 133.Google Scholar
An International Bill of the Rights of Man, New York 1945.Google Scholar
Lassa Oppenheim, International Law. A Treatise, vol. I: Peace, London 1948.Google Scholar
International Law and Human Rights, London 1950.Google Scholar
Law, Robin, An African Response to Abolition: Anglo-Dahomian Negotiations on Ending the Slave Trade, 1838–1877, Slavery & Abolition 16/3 (December 1995), 281310.Google Scholar
Abolition and Imperialism: International Law and the British Suppression of the Atlantic Slave Trade, in Peterson, Derek R (ed.), Abolitionism and Imperialism in Britain, Africa, and the Atlantic, Athens, OH 2010, 150174.Google Scholar
Law, Robin,(ed.), From Slavery to ‘Legitmate’ Commerce: The Commercial Transition in Nineteenth-Century West Africa, Cambridge 2002.Google Scholar
Le Ghait, Alfred, The Anti-Slavery Conference, North American Review 154/424 (March 1892), 287296.Google Scholar
Leiner, Frederick C., The End of Barbary Terror: America’s 1815 War against the Pirates of North Africa, Oxford 2006.Google Scholar
Lesaffer, Randall/Macours, Georges (eds.), Sovereignty and the Law of Nations (16th–18th Centuries), Brussels 2006.Google Scholar
Lester, Alan, Thomas Fowell Buxton and the Networks of British Humanitarianism, in Gilbert, Helen/Tiffin, Chris (eds.), Burden or Benefit? Imperial Benevolence and Its Legacies, Bloomington, IN 2008, 3148.Google Scholar
Humanitarians and White Settlers in the Nineteenth Century, in Etherington, Norman (ed.), Missions and Empire, Oxford 2009, 6485.Google Scholar
Lester, Alan/Dussart, Fae, Colonization and the Origins of Humanitarian Governance: Protecting Aboriginies across the Nineteenth-Century British Empire, Cambridge 2014.Google Scholar
Lewis, Bernard, Race and Slavery in the Middle East: An Historical Enquiry, Oxford 1990.Google Scholar
Lewis, Bernard, What Went Wrong? The Clash between Islam and Modernity in the Middle East, London 2002.Google Scholar
Lewis, James E., The American Union and the Problem of Neighborhood: The United States and the Collapse of the Spanish Empire, 1783–1829, Chapel Hill, NC 1998.Google Scholar
Lewis, Leonard Axel, The Relation of British Policy to the Declaration of the Monroe Doctrine, New York 1922.Google Scholar
Lewis, Mark, The Birth of the New Justice: The Internationalization of Crime and Punishment, 1919–1950, Oxford 2014.Google Scholar
Lillich, Richard B., Forcible Self-Help by States to Protect Human Rights, Iowa Law Review 53 (1967), 325351.Google Scholar
Intervention to Protect Human Rights, McGill Law Journal 15/2 (June 1969), 205219.Google Scholar
Humanitarian Intervention and the United Nations, Charlottesville, VA 1973.Google Scholar
Humanitarian Intervention: A Reply to Ian Brownlie and a Plea for Constructive Alternatives, in Moore, J. N. (ed.), Law and Civil War in the Modern World, Baltimore, MD 1974, 229251.Google Scholar
Linderman, G. F., The Mirror of War: American Society and the Spanish–American War, Ann Arbor, MI 1974.Google Scholar
Lingelbach, William E., The Doctrine and Practice of Intervention in Europe, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 16 (July 1900), 132.Google Scholar
Linn, McAllister Brian, The Philippine War, 1899–1902, Lawrence, TX 2000.Google Scholar
Livingstone, David/Livingstone, Charles, Narrative of an Expedition to the Zambesi and Its Tributaries; and of the Discovery of the Lakes Shirwa and Nyassa, 1858–1864, London 1865.Google Scholar
Lloyd, Christopher, The Navy and the Slave Trade: The Suppression of the African Slave Trade in the Nineteenth Century, London 1968.Google Scholar
Lobban, Michael, Slavery, Insurance and the Law, Journal of Legal History 28/3 (2007), 319328.Google Scholar
LoGerfo, James W., Sir William Dolben and ‘The Cause of Humanity’: The Passage of the Slave Trade Regulation Act of 1788, Eighteenth-Century Studies 6/4 (Summer 1973), 431451.Google Scholar
Long, Helen, Greek Fire: Massacres of Chios, London 1992.Google Scholar
López-Briones, Carmen González, The Indiana Press and the Coming of the Spanish-American War, 1895–1896, Atlantis 12/1 (June 1990), 165176.Google Scholar
Lorimer, James, The Institutes of International Law: A Treatise of the Jural Relations of Separate Political Communities, vol. 1, Edinburgh 1883.Google Scholar
Louet, Ernest, Expédition de Syrie: Beyrouth, Le Liban – Jérusalem, 1860–1864, Paris 1862.Google Scholar
Louet, Ernest, Expédition de Syrie; Camille de Rochemonteix, Le Liban et l’expédition française en Syrie (1860–1861), Paris 1921.Google Scholar
Louis, William Roger, The Berlin Congo Conference, in Louis, William Roger/Gifford, Prosser (eds.), France and Britain in Africa: Imperial Rivalry and Colonial Rule, New Haven, CT 1971, 167220.Google Scholar
Lovejoy, Paul E., Transformation in Slavery: A History of Slavery in Africa, Cambridge, 2000.Google Scholar
Autobiography and Memory: Gustavus Vassa, alias Olaudah Equiano, the African, Slavery & Abolition 27/3 (December 2006), 317347.Google Scholar
Lovrić-Pernak, Kristina, Morale internationale und humanité im Völkerrecht des späten 19. Jahrhunderts, Bedeutung und Funktion in Staatenpraxis und Wissenschaft, Baden-Baden 2013.Google Scholar
Löwenheim, Oded, ‘Do Ourselves Credit and Render a Lasting Service to Mankind’: British Moral Prestige, Humanitarian Intervention, and the Barbary Pirates, International Studies Quarterly 47/1 (March 2003), 2348.Google Scholar
Lynn, Martin, Consul and Kings: British Policy, the ‘Man on the Spot’, and the Seizure of Lagos, 1851, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 10/2 (1982), 150167.Google Scholar
Lyons, Francis S. L., Internationalism in Europe 1815–1914, Leiden 1963.Google Scholar
Lyons, Martyn, Post-Revolutionary Europe, 1815–1856, Basingstoke 2006. Google Scholar
Lypka, Dennis A., The Slave Trade Department of the British Foreign Office and the Suppression of the Transatlantic Slave Trade, MA dissertation, University of Calgary 1977.Google Scholar
MacColl, Malcolm, The Eastern Question: Its Facts and Fallacies, London 1877.Google Scholar
MacDonald, Mairi S., Lord Vivian’s Tears: The Moral Hazards of Humanitarian Intervention, in Klose, Fabian (ed.), The Emergence of Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas and Practice from the Nineteenth Century to the Present, Cambridge 2016, 121141.Google Scholar
MacFarlane, S. Neil, Intervention in Contemporary World Politics, New York 2002.Google Scholar
MacGahan, J. A., The Turkish Atrocities in Bulgaria: Letters of the Special Commissioner of the ‘Daily News’, London 1876.Google Scholar
MacMaster, Richard K., The United States, Great Britain and the Suppression of the Cuban Slave Trade, 1835–1860, PhD dissertation, Georgetown University, Washington, DC 1968.Google Scholar
MacQueen, Norrie, Humanitarian Intervention and the United Nations, Edinburgh 2011.Google Scholar
Cold War Peacekeeping versus Humanitarian Intervention. Beyond the Hammarskjöldian Model, in Klose, Fabian (ed.), The Emergence of Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas and Practice from the Nineteenth Century to the Present, Cambridge 2016, 231252.Google Scholar
Madden, Richard Robert, Address on Slavery in Cuba Presented to the General Anti-Slavery Convention, London 1840.Google Scholar
Madej, Marek (ed.), Western Military Interventions after the Cold War: Evaluating the Wars of the West, Abingdon 2019.Google Scholar
Makdisi, Ussama, The Culture of Sectarianism: Community, History, and Violence in Nineteenth- Century Ottoman Lebanon, Berkeley, CA 2000.Google Scholar
After 1860: Debating Religion, Reform, and Nationalism in the Ottoman Empire, International Journal of Middle East Studies 34/4 (November 2002), 601617.Google Scholar
Mandelstam, André N., La généralisation de la protection internationale des droits de l’homme, Revue de droit international et de législation comparée 3/XI (1930), 297325.Google Scholar
Mandelstam, André N., Der internationale Schutz der Menschenrechte und die New-Yorker Erklärung des Instituts für Völkerrecht, Zeitschrift für ausländisches öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht 2 (1931), 335377.Google Scholar
Manning, Patrick, Slavery and African Life: Occidental, Oriental, and African Slave Trade, Cambridge 1990.Google Scholar
Manning, Patrick, Slave Trades, 1500–1800: Globalization of Forced Labour, Aldershot 1996.Google Scholar
Mannix, Daniel P./Cowley, Malcolm, Black Cargoes: A History of the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1518–1865, New York 1962.Google Scholar
Mansfield, J. S., Remarks on the African Squadron, London 1851.Google Scholar
Ma’oz, Moshe, Ottoman Reform in Syria and Palestine, 1840–1861: The Impact of the Tanzimat on Politics and Society, Oxford 1968.Google Scholar
Marques, Joao Pedro, The Sounds of Silence: Nineteenth-Century Portugal and the Abolition of the Slave Trade, New York 2006.Google Scholar
Slave Revolts and the Abolition of Slavery: An Overinterpretation, in Drescher, Seymour/Emmer, Pieter C (eds.), Who Abolished Slavery? Slave Revolts and Abolitionism: A Debate with Joao Pedro Marques, New York 2010, 340.Google Scholar
Marrus, Michael R., International Bystanders to the Holocaust and Humanitarian Intervention, in Wilson, Richard Ashby/Brown, Richard D. (eds.), Humanitarianism and Suffering: The Mobilization of Empathy, Cambridge 2009, 156174.Google Scholar
Martens, Friedrich, Étude historique sur la politique russe dans la question d’Orient, Revue de droit international et de législation comparée 9/1 (1877), 4977.Google Scholar
Martínez-Fernández, Luis, Torn between Empires: Economy, Society, and Patters of Political Thought in Hispanic Caribbean, 1840–1878, Athens, OH 1994.Google Scholar
The Havana Anglo-Spanish Mixed Commission for the Suppression of the Slave Trade and Cuba’s Emancipados, Slavery and Abolition 16/2 (August 1995), 205225.Google Scholar
Fighting Slavery in the Caribbean: The Life and Times of a British Family in Nineteenth Century Havana, Armonk, NY 1998.Google Scholar
Martinez, Jenny S., Antislavery Courts and the Dawn of International Human Rights Law, Yale Law Journal 117/4 (January 2008), 550641.Google Scholar
Martinez, Jenny S., The Slave Trade and the Origins of International Human Rights Law, Oxford 2012.Google Scholar
Mason, Matthew E., The Battle of the Slaveholding Liberators: Great Britain, the United States, and Slavery in the Early Nineteenth Century, William and Mary Quarterly 59/3 (July 2002), 665696.Google Scholar
Mason, Matthew E., Keeping Up Appearances: The International Politics of Slave Trade Abolition in the Nineteenth-Century Atlantic World, William and Mary Quarterly 66/4 (October 2009), 809832.Google Scholar
Mathieson, William L., Great Britain and the Slave Trade 1839–1865, London 1929.Google Scholar
Matson, Henry James, Remarks on the Slave Trade and African Squadron, London 1848.Google Scholar
May, Ernest R., Imperial Democracy: The Emergence of America as a Great Power, New York 1961.Google Scholar
May, Ernest R., The Making of the Monroe Doctrine, Cambridge, MA 1975.Google Scholar
May, Robert E., Manifest Destiny’s Underworld: Filibustering in Antebellum America, Chapel Hill, NC 2002.Google Scholar
Manifest Destiny’s Filibusters, in Haynes, Sam W./Morris, Christopher (eds.), Manifest Destiny and Empire: American Antebellum Expansionism, College Station, TX 2008, 146179.Google Scholar
Mayall, James (ed.), The New Interventionism, 1991–1994: The United Nations Experience in Cambodia, former Yugoslavia, and Somalia, Cambridge 1996.Google Scholar
Maynard, Douglas H., The World’s Anti-Slavery Convention of 1840, Mississippi Valley Historical Review 47/3 (December 1960), 452471.Google Scholar
Mazlish, Bruce, The Idea of Humanity in a Global Era, New York 2009.Google Scholar
Mazower, Mark, An International Civilization? Empire, Internationalism and the Crisis of the Mid-Twentieth Century, International Affairs 82/3 (May 2006), 553566.Google Scholar
Ende der Zivilisation und Aufstieg der Menschrechte: Die konzeptionelle Trennung Mitte des 20. Jahrhunderts, in Hoffmann, Stefan-Ludwig (ed.), Moralpolitik: Die Geschichte der Menschenrechte im 20. Jahrhundert, Göttingen 2010, 4162.Google Scholar
Governing the World: The History of an Idea, London 2012.Google Scholar
Mazro, Sophia, Translated by Mr. Kelch, Turkish Barbarity: An Affecting Narrative of the Unparalleled Suffering of Mrs. Sophia Mazro, A Greek Lady of Missolonghi, Providence, RI 1828.Google Scholar
Mazzini, Giuseppe, On Nonintervention (1851), in Recchia, Stefano/Urbinati, Nadia (eds.), A Cosmopolitanism of Nations: Guiseppe Mazzini’s Writings on Democracy, Nation Building, and International Relations, Princeton, NJ 2009.Google Scholar
McCallum, Jack, Leonard Wood: Rough Rider, Surgeon, Architect of American Imperialism, New York 2006.Google Scholar
McCarthy, Justin, Death and Exile: The Ethnic Cleansing of Ottoman Muslims 1821–1922, Princeton, NJ 1995.Google Scholar
McCartney, Paul T., Power and Progress: American National Identity, the War of 1898, and the Rise of American Imperialism, Baton Rouge, LA 2006.Google Scholar
McCloy, Shelby T., The Humanitarian Movement in Eighteenth-Century France, New York 1972.Google Scholar
McDougal, Myers S., Humanitarian Intervention to Protect the Ibos, in Lillich, Richard B. (ed.), Humanitarian Intervention and the United Nations, Charlottesville, VA 1973.Google Scholar
McDougall, Walter A., Promised Land, Crusader State: The American Encounter with the World, New York 1997.Google Scholar
McGee, Gale W., The Monroe Doctrine – A Stopgap Measure, Mississippi Valley Historical Review 38/2 (September 1951), 238239.Google Scholar
McGowan, Winston, African Resistance to the Atlantic Slave Trade in West Africa, Slavery & Abolition 11/1 (May 1990), 529.Google Scholar
McGowen, Randall, A Powerful Sympathy: Terror, the Prison, and Humanitarian Reform in Early Nineteenth-Century Britain, Journal of British Studies 25/3 (July 1986), 312334.Google Scholar
Medlicott, W. N., The Congress of Berlin and After: A Diplomatic History of the Near Eastern Settlement 1878–1880, London 1938.Google Scholar
Meissner, Jochen/Mücke, Ulrich/Weber, Klaus, Schwarzes Amerika: Eine Geschichte der Sklaverei, Bonn 2008.Google Scholar
Melton, James van Horn, The Rise of the Public in Enlightenment Europe, Cambridge 2001.Google Scholar
Melville, Ralph/Schröder, Hans-Jürgen (eds.), Der Berliner Kongress von 1878: Die Politik der Grossmächte und die Probleme der Modernisierung in Südosteuropa in der Zweiten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts, Wiesbaden 1982.Google Scholar
Menon, Rajan, The Conceit of Humanitarian Intervention, New York 2016.Google Scholar
Meriage, Lawrence P., The First Serbian Uprising (1804–1813) and the Nineteenth-Century Origins of the Eastern Question, Slavic Review 37/3 (September 1978), 421439.Google Scholar
Merk, Frederick, The Monroe Doctrine and American Expansionism, 1843–1849, New York 1966.Google Scholar
Meron, Theodor, Common Rights of Mankind in Gentili, Grotius and Suarez, American Journal of International Law 85/1 (January 1991), 110116.Google Scholar
Meyer-Heiselberg, Richard, Notes from Liberated African Department, Uppsala 1967.Google Scholar
Midgley, Clare, Women against Slavery: The British Campaigns, 1780–1870, London 1992.Google Scholar
Miers, Suzanne, Britain and Germany in Africa: Imperial Rivalry and Colonial Rule, New Haven, CT 1967, 83118.Google Scholar
Britain and the Ending of the Slave Trade, New York 1975.Google Scholar
The Brussels Conference of 1889–1890: The Slave Trade in the Policies of Great Britain and Germany, in Gifford, Prosser/Louis, William Roger (eds.), Humanitarianism at Berlin: Myth or Reality?, in Förster, Stig/Mommsen, Wolfgang J/Robinson, Ronald (eds.), Bismarck, Europe, and Africa: The Berlin Africa Conference 1884–1885, Oxford 1988, 333345.Google Scholar
Mill, John S., A Few Words on Non-Intervention, December 1859, in Mill, John S., Dissertations and Discussions Political, Philosophical, and Historical Reprinted Chiefly from the Edinburgh and Westminster Reviews, vol. 3, London 1867, 153178.Google Scholar
Mill, John S., Vindication of the French Revolution of February 1848, in Mill, John S., Dissertations and Discussions Political, Philosophical, and Historical Reprinted Chiefly from the Edinburgh and Westminster Reviews, vol. 2, London 1867, 379381.Google Scholar
Miller, Bonnie M., From Liberation to Conquest: The Visual and Popular Cultures of the Spanish-American War of 1898, Amherst, MA 2011.Google Scholar
Millis, Walter, The Martial Spirit: A Study of Our War with Spain, Boston, MA 1931.Google Scholar
Millman, Richard, Britain and the Eastern Question 1875–1878, Oxford 1979.Google Scholar
Millman, Richard, The Bulgarian Massacres Reconsidered, Slavonic and East European Review 58/2 (April 1980), 218231.Google Scholar
Milton, Patrick, Intervening against Tyrannical Rule in the Holy Roman Empire during the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, German History 33/1 (2015), 129.Google Scholar
Minear, Larry, The Humanitarian Enterprise: Dilemmas and Discoveries, Bloomfield 2002.Google Scholar
Mintz, Sidney W., Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History, New York 1985.Google Scholar
Mitzen, Jennifer, Power in Concert: The Nineteenth-Century Origins of Global Governance, Chicago, IL 2013.Google Scholar
Morgan, Philip D., Ending the Slave Trade: A Caribbean and Atlantic Context, in Peterson, Derek R. (ed.), Abolitionism and Imperialism in Britain, Africa, and the Atlantic, Athens, OH 2010, 101128.Google Scholar
Morrow, Glenn R., The Significance of the Doctrine of Sympathy in Hume and Adam Smith, Philosophical Review 32/1 (January 1923), 6078.Google Scholar
Moses, Dirk/Heerten, Lasse (eds.), Postcolonial Conflict and the Question of Genocide: The Nigeria–Biafra War, 1967–1970, New York 2018.Google Scholar
Moyn, Samuel, Empathy in History, Empathizing with Humanity, History and Theory 45/3 (October 2006), 397415.Google Scholar
On the Genealogy of Morals, The Nation 284/15 (April 2007), 2531.Google Scholar
The Last Utopia: Human Rights in History, Cambridge, MA 2010.Google Scholar
Die neue Historiographie der Menschenrechte, Geschichte und Gesellschaft 38/4 (October– December 2012), 545572.Google Scholar
Human Rights and the Uses of History, London 2014.Google Scholar
Moynier, Gustave (ed.), L’Afrique explorée et civilisée, vol. 1–15, Geneva 1879–1894.Google Scholar
Moynier, Gustave, La question du Congo devant l’Institute de droit international, Genf 1883.Google Scholar
La fondation de l’État indépendant du Congo au point de vue juridique, Paris 1887.Google Scholar
Muldoon, James, Francisco de Vitoria and Humanitarian Intervention, Journal of Military Ethics 5/2 (2006), 128143.Google Scholar
Mullan, John, Sentiment and Sociability: The Language of Feeling in the Eighteenth Century, Oxford 1990.Google Scholar
Mulligan, Michael, Nigeria, the British Presence in West Africa and International Law in the 19th Century, Journal of the History of International Law 11 (2009), 273301.Google Scholar
Mulligan, William, British Anti-Slave Trade and Anti-Slavery Policy in East Africa, Arabia, and Turkey in the Late Nineteenth Century, in Simms, Brendan/Trim, David J. B (eds.), Humanitarian Intervention: A History, Cambridge 2011, 257280.Google Scholar
The Anti-Slave Trade Campaign in Europe, 1888–90, in Mulligan, William/Bric, Maurice (eds.), A Global History of Anti-Slavery in the Nineteenth Century, Basingstoke 2013, 149170.Google Scholar
Mulligan, William/Bric, Maurice (eds.), A Global History of Anti-Slavery in the Nineteenth Century, Basingstoke 2013, 149170.Google Scholar
Murphy, Craig N., International Organization and Industrial Change: Global Governance since 1850, Cambridge, MA 1994.Google Scholar
Murphy, Gretchen, Hemispheric Imaginings: The Monroe Doctrine and Narratives of U.S. Empire, Durham, NC 2005.Google Scholar
Murphy, Sean D., Humanitarian Intervention: The United Nations in an Evolving World Order, Philadelphia, PA 1996.Google Scholar
Murphy, Sean D., The Intervention in Kosovo: A Law-Shaping Incident?, Proceedings of the Annual Meeting (American Society of International Law) 94/5–8 (April 2000), 302304.Google Scholar
Murray, David R., Richard Robert Madden: His Career as a Slavery Abolitionist, Studies: An Irish Quarterly Review 61/241 (1972), 4153.Google Scholar
Odious Commerce: Britain, Spain and the Abolition of the Cuban Slave Trade, Cambridge 1980.Google Scholar
Murray, John (ed.), Report of the Committee of the African Civilization Society to the Public Meeting of the Society Held at Exeter Hall, on Tuesday, the 21st of June 1842, London 1842.Google Scholar
Nadelmann, Ethan A., Global Prohibition Regimes: The Evolution of Norms in International Society, International Organization 44/4 (Autumn 1990), 479526.Google Scholar
Nagel, Johann Friedrich Gottlieb, Werden die türkischen Schlachtbänke noch länger von griechischem Blute rauchen? Oder soll der Erbfeind des Kreuzes die Christenheit noch länger höhnen? Ein Wort zu seiner Zeit, Braunschweig 1821.Google Scholar
Nahlawi, Yasmine, The Responsibility to Protect in Libya and Syria: Mass Atrocities, Human Protection, and International Law, Abingdon 2020.Google Scholar
Needell, Jeffrey D., The Abolition of the Brazilian Slave Trade in 1850: Historiography, Slave Agency and Statesmanship, Journal of Latin American Studies 33/4 (November 2001), 681711.Google Scholar
Neely, Tennyson F./Willets, Gilson/Hamm, Margherita Arlina (eds.), Greater America: Heroes. Battles. Camps: Dewey Islands, Cuba, Porto Rico, New York 1898.Google Scholar
Neff, Stephen C., War and the Law of Nations: A General History, Cambridge 2007.Google Scholar
Justice among Nations: A History of International Law, Cambridge MA 2014.Google Scholar
Nelson, Bernard H., The Slave Trade as a Factor in British Foreign Policy 1815–1862, Journal of Negro History 27/2 (April 1942), 192209.Google Scholar
Nerval, Gaston, A Latin American View: Egoistic from Its Pronouncement, in Rappaport, Armin (ed.), The Monroe Doctrine, New York 1964, 9298.Google Scholar
Neumann, Christopher K., Political and Diplomatic Developments, in Faroqhi, Suraiya N. (ed.), The Cambridge History of Turkey, vol. 3: The Later Ottoman Empire, 1603–1839, Cambridge 2006, 4462.Google Scholar
Newbury, C. W. (ed.), British Policy towards West Africa: Select Documents 1786–1874, Oxford 1965.Google Scholar
Newbury, C. W. The Western Slave Coast and Its Rulers: European Trade and Administration among the Yoruba and Adja-speaking Peoples of South-Western Nigeria, Southern Dahomey and Togo, Oxford 1973.Google Scholar
Newton, John, Thoughts upon the African Slave Trade, London 1788.Google Scholar
Nichols, Irby C., Jr, The Eastern Question and the Vienna Conference, September 1822, Journal of Central European Affairs 21/1 (1961), 5366.Google Scholar
Nichols, Irby C., The European Pentarchy and the Congress of Verona, 1822, The Hague 1971.Google Scholar
Nicholson, Andrea, Transformations in the Law Concerning Slavery: Legacies of the Nineteenth Century Anti-Slavery Movement, in Mulligan, William/Bric, Maurice (eds.), A Global History of Anti-Slavery in the Nineteenth Century, Basingstoke 2013, 214236.Google Scholar
Nicolson, Harold, The Congress of Vienna: A Study in Allied Unity 1812–1822, London 1947.Google Scholar
Nijman, Janne E., Minorities and Majorities, in Fassbender, Bardo/Peters, Anne (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of the History of International Law, Oxford 2012, 95119.Google Scholar
Ninkovich, Frank, The United States and Imperialism, Malden, MA 2001.Google Scholar
Norris, Stephen N., A War of Images: Russian Popular Prints, Wartime Culture, and National Identity, 1812–1945, DeKalb, IL 2006.Google Scholar
Nwulia, Moses D. E., Britain and Slavery in East Africa, Washington, DC 1975.Google Scholar
Offner, John L., An Unwanted War: The Diplomacy of the United States and Spain over Cuba, 1895–1898, Chapel Hill, NC 1992.Google Scholar
Oldfield, J. R., The London Committee and Mobilization of Public Opinion against the Slave Trade, Historical Journal 35/2 (June 1992), 331343.Google Scholar
Oldfield, J. R., Popular Politics and British Anti-Slavery. The Mobilization of Public Opinion against the Slave Trade 1787–1807, Manchester 1995.Google Scholar
Oldfield, J. R., Transatlantic Abolitionism in the Age of Revolution: An International History of Anti-slavery, c. 1787–1820, Cambridge 2013.Google Scholar
Oldham, James, Insurance Litigation Involving the Zong and Other British Slave Ships, 1780– 1807, Journal of Legal History 28/3 (2007), 299318.Google Scholar
Onuf, Nicolas, Humanitarian Intervention: The Early Years, Florida Journal of International Law 16/4 (2004), 753787.Google Scholar
Orford, Anne, Reading Humanitarian Intervention: Human Rights and the Use of Force in International Law, Cambridge 2003.Google Scholar
International Authority and the Responsibility to Protect, Cambridge 2011.Google Scholar
O’Sullivan, John, Annexation, United States Magazine and Democratic Review 17/1 (July–August 1845), 510.Google Scholar
Osiander, Andreas, Sovereignty, International Relations, and the Westphalian Myth, International Organization 55/2 (Spring 2001), 251287.Google Scholar
Osterhammel, Jürgen, Krieg im Frieden: Zu Formen und Typologie von Interventionen, in Osterhammel, Jürgen (ed.), Geschichtswissenschaft jenseits des Nationalstaats: Studien zu Beziehungsgeschichte und Zivilisationsvergleich, Göttingen 2001, 288294.Google Scholar
Auf der Suche nach einem 19. Jahrhundert, in Conrad, Sebastian/Eckert, Andreas/Freitag, Ulrike (eds.), Globalgeschichte, Theorie, Ansätze, Themen, Frankfurt a. M. 2007, 109130.Google Scholar
Sklaverei und die Zivilisation des Westens, Munich 2009.Google Scholar
The Transformation of the World: A Global History of the Nineteenth Century, Princeton, NJ 2014.Google Scholar
Schutz, Macht und Verantwortung: Protektion im Zeitalter der Imperien und danach, in Osterhammel, Jürgen (ed.), Die Flughöhe der Adler: Historische Essays zur globalen Gegenwart, Munich 2017, 160182.Google Scholar
Ostrander, Gilman M., The Making of the Triangular Trade Myth, William and Mary Quarterly 30/4 (October 1973), 635644.Google Scholar
Otte, Thomas G., Of Congresses and Gunboats: Military Intervention in the Nineteenth Century, in Otte, Thomas G./Dorman, Andrew M. (eds.), Military Intervention: From Gunboat to Humanitarian Intervention, Aldershot 1995, 1952.Google Scholar
Owen, David, English Philantrophy 1660–1960, Cambridge, MA 1964.Google Scholar
Packard, Peter, Am I Not a Man and a Brother? With All Humility Addressed to the British Legislature, Cambridge 1788.Google Scholar
Panzac, Daniel, Barbary Corsaires: The End of a Legend 1800–1820, Leiden 2005.Google Scholar
Pappas, Paul C., The United States and the Greek War for Independence, 1821–1828, New York 1985.Google Scholar
Paris, Jean Joseph, Considérations sur la crise actuelle de l’empire ottoman, les causes qui l’ont amenée, et les effets qui doivent la suivre, Paris 1821.Google Scholar
Parkinson, C. Northcote, Edward Pellew, Viscount Exmouth, Admiral of the Red, London 1934.Google Scholar
Pattison, James, Humanitarian Intervention and the Responsibility to Protect: Who Should Intervene?, Oxford 2010.Google Scholar
Pauer, Alexander, Die humanitäre Intervention: Militärische und wirtschaftliche Zwangsmaßnahmen zur Gewährleistung der Menschenrechte, Basel 1985.Google Scholar
Paulmann, Johannes, Europäische Monarchien in der Revolution von 1848/49: ‘Die erste wahrhafte Internationale’?, in Langewiesche, Dieter (ed.), Demokratiebewegung und Revolution 1847 bis 1849: Internationale Aspekte und europäische Verbindungen, Karlsruhe 1998, 109139.Google Scholar
Searching for a ‘Royal International’: The Mechanics of Monarchical Relations in Nineteenth-Century Europe, in Paulmann, Johannes/Geyer, Martin H (eds.), The Mechanics of Internationalism: Culture, Society, and Politics from the 1840s to the First World War, Oxford 2001, 146158.Google Scholar
Reformer, Experten und Diplomaten: Grundlagen des Internationalismus, in Thiessen, Hillard von/Windler, Christian (eds.), Akteure der Außenbeziehungen: Netzwerke und Interkulturalität im historischen Wandel, Cologne 2010, 173197.Google Scholar
Conjunctures in the History of International Humanitarian Aid during the Twentieth Century, Humanity 4/2 (Summer 2013), 215238.Google Scholar
The Dilemmas of Humanitarian Aid: Historical Perspectives, in Paulmann, Johannes (ed.), Dilemmas of Humanitarian Aid in the Twentieth Century, Oxford 2016, 131.Google Scholar
Johannes, Paulmann, (ed.), Dilemmas of Humanitarian Aid in the Twentieth Century, Oxford 2016.Google Scholar
Humanitarianism and Empire, in MacKenzie, John M, The Encyclopedia of Empire, vol. II: D–J, Malden, MA 2016, 11121123.Google Scholar
Humanity – Humanitarian Reason – Imperial Humanitarianism. European Concepts in Practice, in Klose, Fabian/Thulin, Mirjam (eds.), Humanity: A History of European Concepts in Practice from the Sixteenth Century to the Present, Göttingen 2017, 287311.Google Scholar
Paulmann, Johannes/Geyer, Martin H. (eds.), The Mechanics of Internationalism: Culture, Society, and Politics from the 1840s to the First World War, Oxford 2001.Google Scholar
Paxman, John M./Boggs, George T. (eds.), The United Nations: A Reassessment. Sanctions, Peacekeeping, and Humanitarian Assistance, Charlottesville, VA 1973.Google Scholar
Pearson, Andrew, Distant Freedom: St Helena and the Abolition of the Slave Trade, 1840–1872, Liverpool 2016.Google Scholar
Pedersen, Susan, The Guardians: The League of Nations and Crisis of Empire, Oxford 2014.Google Scholar
Pekesen, Berna, Vertreibung und Abwanderung der Muslime vom Balkan, Europäische Geschichte Online (EGO), Institut für Europäische Geschichte (IEG), Mainz 2011, http://www.ieg-ego.eu/pekesenb-2011-de.Google Scholar
Pellion, Général de division, La Grèce et les Capodistrias pendant l’occupation française de 1828 à 1834, Paris 1855.Google Scholar
Pemberton, Jo-Anne Claire, The So-Called Right of Civilisation in European Colonial Ideology, 16th to 20th Centuries, Journal of the History of International Law 15/1 (2013), 2552.Google Scholar
Penn, Virginia, Philhellenism in Europe, 1821–1828, Slavonic and East European Review 16/48 (April 1938), 638653.Google Scholar
Pérez, Louis A. Jr, Cuba between Empires, 1878–1902, Pittsburgh, PA 1983.Google Scholar
The Meaning of the Maine: Causation and the Historiography of the Spanish–American War, Pacific Historical Review 58/3 (August 1989), 292322.Google Scholar
Cuba and the United States: Ties of Singular Intimacy, Athens, OH 1997.Google Scholar
The War of 1898: The United States and Cuba in History and Historiography, Chapel Hill, NC 1998.Google Scholar
Incurring a Debt of Gratitude: 1898 and the Moral Sources of United States Hegemony in Cuba, American Historical Review 104/2 (April 1999), 356398.Google Scholar
Cuba between Reform and Revolution, New York 2015.Google Scholar
Perkins, Bradford, Castlereagh and Adams: England and the United States 1812–1823, Berkeley, CA 1964.Google Scholar
The Causes of the War of 1812: National Honor or National Interest?, New York 1976.Google Scholar
The Cambridge History of American Foreign Relations, vol. 1: The Creation of a Republican Empire, 1776–1865, Cambridge 1993.Google Scholar
Perkins, Dexter, A History of the Monroe Doctrine, London 1963.Google Scholar
Perkins, Roger/Douglas-Morris, K. J., Gunfire in Barbary: Admiral Exmouth’s Battle with the Corsairs of Algiers in 1816 – the Story of the Suppression of White Slavery, Homewell 1982.Google Scholar
Peterson, Derek R. (ed.), Abolitionism and Imperialism in Britain, Africa, and the Atlantic, Athens, OH 2010.Google Scholar
Petrie, Charles, Lord Liverpool and His Times, London 1954.Google Scholar
Philips, James (ed.), Substance of the Debates on a Resolution for Abolishing the Slave Trade, which was moved in the House of Commons on the 10th June, 1806, and in the House of Lords on the 24th June, 1806, London 1806.Google Scholar
Phillips, Jonathan, Heiliger Krieg: Eine neue Geschichte der Kreuzzüge, Bonn 2012.Google Scholar
Pierson, William D., White Cannibals, Black Martyrs: Fear, Depression, and Religious Faith as Causes of Suicide among New Slaves, Journal of Negro History 62/2 (April 1977), 147159.Google Scholar
Pinker, Steven, The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined, New York 2011.Google Scholar
Pitts, Jennifer, A Turn to Empire: The Rise of Liberal Imperialism in Britain and France, Princeton, NJ 2005.Google Scholar
Boundaries of Victorian International Law, in Bell, Duncan S (ed.), Victorian Visions of Global Order: Empire and International Relations in Nineteenth-Century Political Thought, Cambridge 2007, 6788.Google Scholar
Intervention and Sovereign Equality: Legacies of Vattel, in Recchia, Stefano/Welsh, Jennifer M (eds.), Just and Unjust Military Intervention: European Thinkers from Vitoria to Mill, Cambridge 2013, 132153.Google Scholar
Plymouth Committee (ed.), Plan of an African Ship’s Lower Deck with Negroes in the Proportion of Only One to a Ton, Plymouth 1788.Google Scholar
Pocock, Tom, Breaking the Chains: The Royal Navy’s War against White Slavery, London 2006.Google Scholar
Pogany, Istvan, Humanitarian Intervention in International Law: The French Intervention in Syria Re-Examined, International and Comparative Law Quarterly 35/1 (January 1986), 182190.Google Scholar
Poole, Fred/Vanzi, Max, Revolution in the Philippines: The United States in a Hall of Cracked Mirrors, New York 1984.Google Scholar
Porter, Andrew, Trusteeship, Anti-Slavery, and Humanitarianism, in Porter, Andrew (ed.), The Oxford History of the British Empire, vol. III: The Nineteenth Century, Oxford 1999, 198221.Google Scholar
Sir Roger Casement and the International Humanitarian Movement, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 29/2 (May 2001), 5974.Google Scholar
Poyo, Gerald E., Evolution of Cuban Separatist Thought in the Emigré Communities of the United States, 1848–1895, Hispanic American Historical Review 66/3 (August 1986), 485507.Google Scholar
Pratt, Julius W., The Origin of ‘Manifest Destiny’, American Historical Review 32/4 (July 1927), 795798.Google Scholar
Prévost, Stéphanie, The Eastern Question and Britain’s Foreign Policy (1876–1896), in Harris, Trevor (ed.), Art, Politics and Society in Britain 1880–1914: Aspects of Modernity and Modernism, Newcastle 2009, 121137.Google Scholar
W. T. Stead and the Eastern Question (1875–1911); or, How to Rouse England and Why?, 19. Interdisciplinary Studies in the Long Nineteenth Century 16 (2013), www.19.bbk.ac.uk/articles/10.16995/ntn.654/.Google Scholar
New Perspectives on the Eastern Question(s) in Late-Victorian Britain, Or How ‘the Eastern Question’ Affected British Politics (1881–1901), in Delmas, Catherine/Gadoin, Isabelle (eds.), Représentations: ‘Naming, Labelling and Addressing’, Grenoble June 2015, https://hal.archives-ouvertes .fr/hal-02558661/document.Google Scholar
Priesching, Nicole, Die Verurteilung der Sklaverei unter Gregor XVI. im Jahr 1839. Ein Traditionsburch?, Saeculum. Jahrbuch für Universalgeschichte 59 (2008), 143162.Google Scholar
Priestley, Joseph, A Sermon on the Subject of the Slave Trade; Delivered to a Society of Protestant Dissenters, at the New Meeting, in Birmingham; and Published at Their Request, Birmingham 1788.Google Scholar
Prokesch-Osten, Comte Anton (ed.), Dépêches inédites du Chevalier de Gentz aux hospodars de Valachie: Pour servir à l’histoire de la politique européene (1813 à 1828), vol. I, Paris 1876.Google Scholar
Prousis, Theophilus C., Russian Philorthodox Relief during the Greek War of Independence, Modern Greek Studies Yearbook 1 (1985), 3162.Google Scholar
Prousis, Theophilus C., Russian Society and the Greek Revolution, DeKalb, GA 1994.Google Scholar
Puryear, Vernon John, France and the Levant: From the Bourbon Restoration to the Peace of Kutiah, Berkeley, CA 1968.Google Scholar
Putney, Martha, The Slave Trade in French Diplomacy from 1814 to 1815, Journal of Negro History 60/3 (July 1975), 411427.Google Scholar
Pybus, Cassandra, ‘A Less Favourable Specimen’: The Abolitionist Response to Self-Emancipated Slaves in Sierra Leone, 1793–1808, Parliamentary History 26/Supplement (2007), 97112.Google Scholar
Pyta, Wolfram, Konzert der Mächte und kollektives Sicherheitssystem: Neue Wege zwischenstaatlicher Friedenswahrung in Europa nach dem Wiener Kongress 1815, in: Jahrbuch des Historischen Kollegs 2, Munich 1997, 133173.Google Scholar
Das europäische Mächtekonzert: Friedens- und Sicherheitspolitik vom Wiener Kongress 1815 bis zum Krimkrieg 1853, Cologne 2009.Google Scholar
Kulturgeschichtliche Annäherung an das europäische Mächtekonzert, in Pyta, Wolfram (ed.), Das europäische Mächtekonzert: Friedens- und Sicherheitspolitik vom Wiener Kongress 1815 bis zum Krimkrieg 1853, Cologne 2009, 124.Google Scholar
Hegemonie und Gleichgewicht, in Dülffer, Jost/Loth, Wilfried (eds.), Dimensionen internationaler Geschichte, Munich 2012, 373388.Google Scholar
Quataert, Donald, The Ottoman Empire 1700–1922, Cambridge 2005.Google Scholar
Quinns, John F., ‘Three Cheers for the Abolitionist Pope!’: American Reactions to Gregory XVI’s Condemnation of the Slave Trade, 1840–1860, Catholic Historical Review 90/1 (January 2004), 6793.Google Scholar
Quirk, Joel, The Anti-Slavery Project: From the Slave Trade to Human Trafficking, Philadelphia, PA 2011.Google Scholar
Quirk, Joel/Richardson, David, Anti-Slavery, European Identity and International Society: A Macro-historical Perspective, Journal of Modern European History 7/1 (2009), 6892.Google Scholar
Quiroz, Alfonso W., Loyalist Overkill: The Socioeconomic Costs of »Repressing« the Separatist Insurrection in Cuba, 1868–1878, Hispanic American Historical Review 78/2 (May 1998), 261305.Google Scholar
Radner, John B., The Art of Sympathy in Eighteenth-Century British Moral Thought, Studies in Eighteenth-Century Culture 9 (1979), 189210.Google Scholar
Raimondo, Justin, Defenders of the Republic: The Anti-Interventionist Tradition in American Politics, in Denson, John V. (ed.), The Costs of War: America’s Pyrrhic Victories, New Brunswick, NJ 1997, 6774.Google Scholar
Ralfe, James, The Battle of Navarin, Compared with Other Important Naval Events; Justifying, by Analogy, the Conduct of Sir Edward Codrington Shewing His Right to the Thanks of Parliament, and the Propriety of Granting Pecuniary Compensation to the Men, London 1829.Google Scholar
Rankin, F. Harrison, The White Man’s Grave: A Visit to Sierra Leone in 1834, London 1836 .Google Scholar
Rathbone, Richard, Resistance to Enslavement in West Africa, in Manning, Patrick (ed.), Slave Trades, 1500–1800: Globalization of Forced Labour, Aldershot 1996, 183194.Google Scholar
Recchia, Stefano/Welsh, Jennifer M. (eds.), Just and Unjust Military Intervention: European Thinkers from Vitoria to Mill, Cambridge 2013.Google Scholar
Reddy, William M., Sentimentalism and Its Erasure: The Role of Emotions in the Era of the French Revolution, Journal of Modern History 72/1 (March 2000), 109152.Google Scholar
Redfield, Peter/Bornstein, Erica, An Introduction to the Anthropology of Humanitarianism, in Redfield, Peter/Bornstein, Erica (eds.), Forces of Compassion: Humanitarianism Between Ethics and Politics, Santa Fe, NM 2010, 330.Google Scholar
Rediker, Marcus, The Slave Ship: A Human History, New York 2007.Google Scholar
Reed, Nelson A., The Caste War of Yucatán, Stanford, CA 2001.Google Scholar
Rees, Siân, Sweet Water and Bitter: The Ships that Stopped the Slave Trade, London 2009.Google Scholar
Reich, Jerome, The Slave Trade at the Congress of Vienna: A Study in English Public Opinion, Journal of Negro History 53/2 (April 1968), 129143.Google Scholar
Reinalda, Bob, Routledge History of International Organizations: From 1815 to the Present Day, London 2009.Google Scholar
Reinerman, Alan, Metternich, Italy, and the Congress of Verona, Historical Journal 14/2 (June 1971), 263287.Google Scholar
Reis, Joao José, Slave Resistance in Brazil: Bahia, 1807–1835, Luso-Brazilian Review 25/1 (Summer 1988), 111144.Google Scholar
Reisman, Michael with the collaboration of Myers S. McDougal, Humanitarian Intervention to Protect the Ibos, in Lillich, Richard B. (ed.), Humanitarian Intervention and the United Nations, Charlottesville, VA 1973, 167195.Google Scholar
Renault, François, Lavigerie, l’esclavage africain et l’Europe, 1868–1892, vol. II: Campagne antiesclavagiste, Paris 1971.Google Scholar
Cardinal Lavigerie: Churchman, Prophet, and Missionary, London 1994.Google Scholar
Repousis, Angelo, ‘The Cause of the Greeks’: Philadelphia and the Greek War for Independence, 1821–1828, Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 123/4 (October 1999), 333363.Google Scholar
Resnick, Daniel P., The Société des Amis des Noirs and the Abolition of Slavery, French Historical Studies 7/4 (Autumn 1972), 558569.Google Scholar
Richmond, Steven, The Voice of England in the East: Stratford Canning and Diplomacy with the Ottoman Empire, London 2014.Google Scholar
Ribi Forclaz, Amalia, Humanitarian Imperialism: The Politics of Anti-Slavery Activism, 1880–1940, Oxford 2015.Google Scholar
Richardson, David, Shipboard Revolts: African Authority, and the Atlantic Slave Trade, William and Mary Quarterly 58/1 (January 2001), 6992.Google Scholar
Richardson, David/Schwarz, Suzanne/Tibbles, Anthony (eds.), Liverpool and Transatlantic Slavery, Liverpool 2007.Google Scholar
Richardson, Samuel, Pamela: Or, Virtue Rewarded, London 1741.Google Scholar
Clarissa: Or, the History of a Young Lady, London 1748.Google Scholar
Roberts, Adam, Humanitarian Action in War: Aid, Protection and Impartiality in a Policy Vacuum, Oxford 1996.Google Scholar
Roberts, Adam, The United Nations and Humanitarian Intervention, in Welsh, Jennifer M. (ed.), Humanitarian Intervention and International Relations, Oxford 2006, 7197.Google Scholar
Roberts, Adam/Guelff, Richard (eds.), Documents on the Laws of War, Oxford 2000.Google Scholar
Roberts, M. J. D., Making English Morals: Voluntary Associations and Moral Reform in England, 1787–1886, Cambridge 2004.Google Scholar
Robertson, William Spence, South America and the Monroe Doctrine, 1824–1828, Political Science Quarterly 30/1 (March 1915), 82105.Google Scholar
Robinson, Ronald, The Excentric Idea of Imperialism, with or without Empire, in Mommsen, Wolfgang J./Osterhammel, Jürgen (eds.), Imperialism and After: Continuities and Discontinuities, London 1986, 267289.Google Scholar
Robinson, Ronald/Gallagher, John, Africa and the Victorians: The Official Mind of Imperialism, London 1981.Google Scholar
Rodogno, Davide, Réflexions liminaires à propos des intervention humanitaires des Puissances européenes aux XIXe siècle, Relations Internationales 131 (July–September 2007), 925.Google Scholar
The ‘Principles of Humanity’ and the European Powers’ Intervention in Ottoman Lebanon and Syria in 1860–1861, in Simms, Brendan/Trim, David J. B. (eds.), Humanitarian Intervention: A History, Cambridge 2011, 159183.Google Scholar
Against Massacre: Humanitarian Interventions in the Ottoman Empire, 1815–1914, Princeton, NJ 2012.Google Scholar
European Legal Doctrines on Intervention and the Status of the Ottoman Empire within the ‘Family of Nations’ throughout the Nineteenth Century, Journal of the History of International Law 18 (2016), 137.Google Scholar
Non-State Actors’ Humanitarian Operations in the Aftermath of the First World War: The Case of the Near East Relief, in Klose, Fabian (ed.), The Emergence of Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas and Practice from the Nineteenth Century to the Present, Cambridge 2016, 185207.Google Scholar
Roelofsen, Cornelisen G., International Arbitration and Courts, in Fassbender, Bardo/Peters, Anne (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of the History of International Law, Oxford 2012, 144169.Google Scholar
Rogers, Helen, Kindness and Reciprocity: Liberated Prisoners and Christian Charity in Early Nineteenth-Century England, Journal of Social History 47/3 (Spring 2014), 721745.Google Scholar
Rogers, Henry Wade, International Law in the Late War, Forum 27 (July 1899), 578591.Google Scholar
Rolin-Jaequemyns, Gustave, Le droit international et la phase actuelle de la question d’Orient, Revue de droit international et de législation comparée VIII (1876), 293385.Google Scholar
Note sur la théorie du droit d’intervention, a propos d’une lettre de M. le Professeur Arntz, Revue de droit International et de legislation comparée VIII (1876), 673682.Google Scholar
La Question d’Orient – L’Armistice – La conférence de Constantinople et ses suites (Octobre 1876–Janvier 1877), Revue de droit international et de législation comparée VIII (1876), 511544.Google Scholar
Chronique du droit international: L’année 1877 et les débuts de 1878 au point de vue du droit international, Revue de droit international et de législation comparée X (1878), 559.Google Scholar
Rosenau, James N./Czempiel, Ernst-Otto (eds.), Governance without Government: Order and Change in World Politics, Cambridge 1992.Google Scholar
Rosenbaum, Alan S. (ed.), Is the Holocaust Unique? Perspectives on Comparative Genocide, Boulder, CO 1996.Google Scholar
Rougier, Antoine, La théorie de l’intervention d’humanité, Revue générale de droit internationale public XVII (1910), 468526.Google Scholar
Russell, Talcott H., The National Idea, Yale Law Journal 7/8 (May 1898), 346351.Google Scholar
Ryan, Maeve, The Price of Legitimacy in Humanitarian Intervention: Britain, the Right of Search, and the Abolition of the West African Slave Trade 1807–1867, in Simms, Brendan/Trim, David J. B (eds.), Humanitarian Intervention: A History, Cambridge 2011, 231256.Google Scholar
A Most Promising Field for Future Usefulness’: The Church Missionary Society and the Liberated Africans of Sierra Leone, in Mulligan, William/Bric, Maurice (eds.), A Global History of Anti-Slavery in the Nineteenth Century, Basingstoke 2013, 3758.Google Scholar
Ryden, David Beck, West Indian Slavery and British Abolition, 1783–1807, Cambridge 2009.Google Scholar
Saab, Ann Pottinger, The Doctor’s Dilemma: Britain and the Cretan Crisis 1866–69, Journal of Modern History 49/4 (December 1977), 13831407.Google Scholar
Saab, Ann Pottinger, Reluctant Icon: Gladstone, Bulgaria, and the Working Classes, 1856–1878, Cambridge 1991.Google Scholar
Salih, Shakeed, The British–Druze Connection and the Druze Rising of 1896 in the Hawran, Middle Eastern Studies 13/2 (May 1977), 251257.Google Scholar
Salt, Henry S., Humanitarianism: Its General Principles and Progress, London 1891.Google Scholar
Salt, Henry S., What Is Humanitarianism?, Humane Review 8 (October 1907), 178188.Google Scholar
Salter, Mark B., Barbarians and Civilization in International Relations, London 2002.Google Scholar
Salvatici, Silvia, A History of Humanitarianism, 1755–1989: In the Name of Others, Manchester 2019.Google Scholar
Saunders, Christopher, A Nineteenth Century Farce: The Anglo-Portuguese Mixed Commission at the Cape of Good Hope, Quarterly Bulletin of the South African Library 37 (1983), 298302.Google Scholar
Liberated Africans in Cape Colony in the First Half of the Nineteenth Century, International Journal of African Historical Studies 18/2 (1985), 223239.Google Scholar
Scanlan, Padraic Xavier, The Rewards of their Exertions: Prize Money and British Abolitionism in Sierra Leone, 1808–1823, Past & Present 225/1 (November 2014), 113142.Google Scholar
Scheffler, Thomas, Ethnizität, symbolische Gewalt und internationaler Terrorismus im Vorderen Orient, in Scheffler, Thomas (ed.), Ethnizität und Gewalt, Hamburg 1991, 221250.Google Scholar
Scheffler, Thomas, ‘Wenn hinten, weit, in der Türkei die Völker aufeinander schlagen…’: Zum Funktionswandel ‘orientalischer’ Gewalt in europäischen Öffentlichkeiten des 19. und 20. Jahrhunderts, in Requate, Jörg/Wessel, Martin Schulze (eds.), Europäische Öffentlickeit: Transnationale Kommunikation seit dem 18. Jahrhundert, Frankfurt a. M. 2002, 205230.Google Scholar
Schellings, William J., Florida and the Cuban Revolution, 1895–1898, Florida Historical Quarterly 39/2 (October 1960), 175186.Google Scholar
Schlesier, Gustav (ed.), Schriften von Friedrich von Gentz: Ein Denkmal, vol. 5, Mannheim 1840.Google Scholar
Schlichte, Klaus, Das formierende Säkulum: Macht und Recht in der internationalen Politik des 19. Jahrhunderts, in Lappenküper, Ulrich/Marcowitz, Reiner (eds.), Macht und Recht: Völkerrecht in den internationalen Beziehungen, Paderborn 2010, 161177.Google Scholar
Schmidt-Nowara, Christopher, Wilberforce Spanished: Joseph Blanco White and Spanish Antislavery, in Schmidt-Nowara, Christopher/Fradera, Josep M. (eds.), Slavery and Antislavery in Spain’s Atlantic Empire, New York 2013, 158175.Google Scholar
Schnabel, Albrecht/Thakur, Ramesh (eds.), Kosovo and the Challenge of Humanitarian Intervention: Selective Indignation, Collective Action, and International Citizenship, Tokyo 2000.Google Scholar
Schroeder, Paul W., Metternich’s Diplomacy at Its Zenith 1820–1823, Austin, TX 1962.Google Scholar
Austria, Great Britain, and the Crimean War: The Destruction of the European Concert, Ithaca, NY 1972.Google Scholar
Did the Vienna Settlement Rest on a Balance of Power?, American Historical Review 97/3 (June 1992), 683706.Google Scholar
The Transformation of European Politics 1763–1848, Oxford 1994.Google Scholar
International Politics, Peace, and War, 1815–1914, in Blanning, T. C. W. (ed.), The Nineteenth Century: The Short Oxford History of Europe, Oxford 2000, 158209.Google Scholar
Alliances, 1815–1945: Weapons of Power and Tools of Management, in Schroeder, Paul W. (ed.), Systems, Stability, and Statecraft: Essays on the International History of Modern Europe, New York 2004, 199200.Google Scholar
Schroeder, Paul W., (ed.), Systems, Stability, and Statecraft: Essays on the International History of Modern Europe, New York 2004Google Scholar
Schroeder, Paul W., The Transformation of European Politics 1763–1848, Oxford 1994.Google Scholar
Schulte, Jan Erik, From the Protection of Sovereignty to Humanitarian Intervention? Traditions and Developments of United Nations Peacekeeping in the Twentieth Century, in Klose, Fabian (ed.), The Emergence of Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas and Practice from the Nineteenth Century to the Present, Cambridge 2016, 253277.Google Scholar
Schulz, Matthias, Normen und Praxis: Das Europäische Konzert der Großmächte als Sicherheitsrat 1815–1860, Munich 2009.Google Scholar
Internationale Politik und Friedenskultur: Das Europäische Konzert in politikwissenschaftlicher Theorie und historischer Empirie, in Pyta, Wolfram (ed.), Das europäische Mächtekonzert: Friedens- und Sicherheitspolitik vom Wiener Kongress 1815 bis zum Krimkrieg 1853, Cologne 2009, 4157.Google Scholar
Macht, internationale Politik und Normenwandel im Staatensystem des 19.Google Scholar
Jahrhunderts, in Lappenküper, Ulrich/Marcowitz, Reiner (eds.), Macht und Recht: Völkerrecht in den internationalen Beziehungen, Paderborn 2010, 113134.Google Scholar
The Guarantees of Humanity: The Concert of Europe and the Origins of the Russo-Ottoman War of 1877, in Simms, Brendan/Trim, David J. B. (eds.), Humanitarian Intervention: A History, Cambridge 2011, 184204.Google Scholar
Internationale Institutionen, in Dülffer, Jost/Loth, Wilfried (eds.), Dimensionen internationaler Geschichte, Munich 2012, 213232.Google Scholar
Schulz, Oliver, Ein Sieg der zivilisierten Welt? Die Intervention der europäischen Großmächte im griechischen Unabhängigkeitskrieg (1826–1832), Berlin 2011.Google Scholar
Schutter, Bart de, Humanitarian Intervention: A United Nations Task, California Western International Law Journal 21/3 (1972), 2136.Google Scholar
Schwarz, Suzanne, Commerce, Civilization and Christianity: The Development of the Sierra Leone Company, in Schwarz, Suzanne/Richardson, David/Tibbles, Anthony (eds.), Liverpool and Transatlantic Slavery, Liverpool 2007, 252276.Google Scholar
Segesser, Daniel Marc, Humanitarian Intervention and the Issue of State Sovereignty in the Discourse of Legal Experts between 1830s and the First World War, in Klose, Fabian (ed.), The Emergence of Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas and Practice from the Nineteenth Century to the Present, Cambridge 2016, 5672.Google Scholar
Semmel, Bernard, Liberalism and Naval Strategy: Ideology, Interest, and Sea Power during the Pax Britannica, Boston, MA 1986.Google Scholar
Seton-Watson, R. W., Disraeli, Gladstone and the Eastern Question: A Study in Diplomacy and Party Politics, London 1971.Google Scholar
Sewell, Mike, Humanitarian Intervention, Democracy, and Imperialism: The American War with Spain, 1898, and After, in Simms, Brendan/Trim, David J. B. (eds.), Humanitarian Intervention: A History, Cambridge 2011, 303322.Google Scholar
Sexton, Jay, The Monroe Doctrine: Empire and Nation in Nineteenth-Century America, New York 2011.Google Scholar
Seybolt, Taylor B., Humanitarian Military Intervention: The Conditions for Success and Failure, Oxford 2007.Google Scholar
Shaikh, Farida, Judicial Diplomacy: British Officials and the Mixed Commission Courts, in Hamilton, Keith/Salmon, Patrick (eds.), Slavery, Diplomacy and Empire: Britain and the Suppression of the Slave Trade, 1807–1975, Portland, OR 2009, 4264.Google Scholar
Shannon, Richard T., Gladstone and the Bulgarian Agitation 1876, Hassocks 1975.Google Scholar
Gladstone and British Balkan Policy, in Melville, Ralph/ Schröder, Hans-Jürgen (eds.), Der Berliner Kongress von 1878: Die Politik der Grossmächte und die Probleme der Modernisierung in Südosteuropa in der Zweiten Hälfte des 19. Jahrhunderts, Wiesbaden 1982, 163178.Google Scholar
Shaw, Caroline, Britannia’s Embrace: Modern Humanitarianism and the Imperial Origins of Refugee Relief, Oxford 2015.Google Scholar
Shaw, Ibrahim Seaga, The Politics of Humanitarian Intervention: A Critical Analogy of the British Response to End the Slave Trade and the Civil War in Sierra Leone, Journal of Global Ethics 6/3, 2010, 273285.Google Scholar
Sheehan, James J., The Problem of Sovereignty in European History, American Historical Review 111/1 (February 2006), 115.Google Scholar
Sheridan, Charles Brinsley, Thoughts on the Greek Revolution, London 1822.Google Scholar
Shute, Stephen/Hurley, Susan (eds.), On Human Rights: The Oxford Amnesty Lectures, New York 1993.Google Scholar
Simms, Brendan/Trim, David J. B., Towards a History of Humanitarian Intervention, in Simms, Brendan/Trim, David J. B (eds.), Humanitarian Intervention: A History, Cambridge 2011, 124.Google Scholar
A False Principle in the Law of Nations’: Burke, State Sovereignty, [German] Liberty, and Intervention in the Age of Westphalia, in Simms, Brendan/Trim, David J. B (eds.), Humanitarian Intervention: A History, Cambridge 2011, 89110.Google Scholar
Brendan, Simms/Trim, David J. B (eds.), Humanitarian Intervention: A History, Cambridge 2011.Google Scholar
Simonen, Katariina, The State versus the Individual: The Unresolved Dilemma of Humanitarian Intervention, Leiden 2011.Google Scholar
Sked, Alan, Metternich’s Enemies or the Threat from Below, in Sked, Alan (ed.), Europe’s Balance of Power 1815–1848, London 1979, 164189.Google Scholar
Skinner, Rob/Lester, Alan, Humanitarianism and Empire: New Research Agendas, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 40/5 (December 2012), 729747.Google Scholar
Sluga, Glenda, Internationalism in the Age of Nationalism, Philadelphia, PA 2013.Google Scholar
Sluga, Glenda, ‘Who Hold the Balance of the World?’ Bankers at the Congress of Vienna, and in International History, American Historical Review 122/5 (December 2017), 14031430.Google Scholar
Smallwood, Stephanie, Saltwater Slavery: A Middle Passage from Africa to American Diaspora, Cambridge, MA 2007.Google Scholar
Smiley, Will, War without War: The Battle of Navarino, the Ottoman Empire, and the Pacific Blockade, Journal of the History of International Law 18/1 (2016), 4269.Google Scholar
Smith, Adam, The Theory of Moral Sentiments, London 1853.Google Scholar
Smith, George, The Case of Our West-African Cruisers and West-African Settlements Fairly Considered, London 1848.Google Scholar
Smith, Johanna M., Slavery, Abolition, and the Nation in Priscilla Wakefield’s Tour Books for Children, in Carey, Brycchan/Ellis, Markman/Salih, Sara (eds.), Discourses of Slavery and Abolition: Britain and its Colonies, 1760–1838, London 2004, 175193.Google Scholar
Smith, Joseph, The Spanish–American War: Conflict in the Caribbean and the Pacific 1895–1902, London 1994.Google Scholar
Smith, Robert S., The Lagos Consulate 1851–1861, London 1978.Google Scholar
Solow, Barbara L./Engerman, Stanley L. (eds.), British Capitalism and Caribbean Slavery: The Legacy of Eric Williams, Cambridge 1987.Google Scholar
Soulsby, Hugh G., The Right of Search and the Slave Trade in Anglo-American Relations 1814–1862, Baltimore, MD 1933.Google Scholar
Spagnolo, John P., Constitutional Change in Mount Lebanon: 1861–1864, Middle Eastern Studies 7/1 (January 1971), 2548.Google Scholar
Spagnolo, John P., France and Ottoman Lebanon 1861–1914, London 1977.Google Scholar
Spiers, Edward M., The Use of the Dum Dum Bullet in Colonial Warfare, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History 4/1 (1975), 314.Google Scholar
St Clair, William, That Greece Might Still Be Free: The Philhellenes in the War of Independence, London 1972.Google Scholar
Stagg, J. C. A., The War of 1812: Conflict for a Continent, Cambridge 2012.Google Scholar
Stanfield, James Field, The Guinea Voyage: A Poem in Three Books, London 1789.Google Scholar
Stanfield, James Field, Observations on a Guinea Voyage in a Series of Letters Addressed to the Rev. Thomas Clarkson, London 1788.Google Scholar
Stapleton, Augustus Granville, George Canning and His Time, London 1859.Google Scholar
Stapleton, Augustus Granville, Intervention and Non-Intervention or the Foreign Policy of Great Britain from 1790 to 1865, London 1866.Google Scholar
Stauber, Reinhard/Kerschbaumer, Florian, Revolution, Restauration und Intervention: Beobachtungen zum Politikraum Europa in der Zeit des Wiener Kongresses, in Kampmann, Christoph/Niggemann, Ulrich (eds.), Sicherheit in der Frühen Neuzeit: Norm, Praxis, Repräsentation, Cologne 2013, 156174.Google Scholar
Stauber, Reinhard/Kerschbaumer, Florian/Koschier, Marion (eds.), Mächtepolitik und Friedenssicherung: Zur politischen Kultur Europas im Zeichen des Wiener Kongresses, Berlin 2014.Google Scholar
Steckel, Richard H./Jensen, Richard A., New Evidence and Crew Mortality in the Atlantic Slave Trade, Journal of Economic History 46/1 (March 1986), 5777.Google Scholar
Stein, Mark, Who’s Afraid of Cannibals? Some Uses of the Cannibalism Trope in Olaudah Equiano’s Interesting Narrative, in Carey, Brycchan/Ellis, Markman/Salih, Sara (eds.), Discourses of Slavery and Abolition: Britain and Its Colonies, 1760–1838, Basingstoke 2004, 96107.Google Scholar
Stephen, James, The Crisis of the Sugar Colonies or an Equiry into the Objects and Probable Effects of the French Expedition to the West Indies, and Their Connection with Colonial Interest of the British Empire, London 1802.Google Scholar
War in Disguise or the Frauds of the Neutral Flags, London 1805.Google Scholar
An Inquiry into the Right and Duty of Compelling Spain to Relinquish Her Slave Trade in Northern Africa, London 1816.Google Scholar
Stevenson, Ana, The ‘Great Doctrine of Human Rights’: Articulation and Authentication in the Nineteenth-Century U.S. Antislavery and Women’s Rights Movements, Humanity 8/3 (Winter 2017), 413439.Google Scholar
Stites, Richard, The Four Horsemen: Riding to Liberty in Post-Napoleonic Europe, Oxford 2014.Google Scholar
Stowell, Ellery C., Intervention in International Law, Washington, DC 1921.Google Scholar
La théorie et la pratique de l’intervention, Académie de droit international (ed.), Recueil des cours II/40 (1932), 91148.Google Scholar
Humanitarian Intervention, American Journal of International Law 33/4 (October 1939), 733736.Google Scholar
Stuart, Reginald C., War and American Thought: From the Revolution to the Monroe Doctrine, Kent, OH 1982.Google Scholar
Stucki, Andreas, Bevölkerungskontrolle in asymmetrischen Konflikten: Zwangsumsiedlung und spanische Antiguerilla auf Kuba, 1868–1898, in Bührer, Tanja/Stachelbeck, Christian/Walter, Dierk (eds.), Imperialkriege von 1500 bis heute: Strukturen, Akteure, Lernprozesse, Paderborn 2011, 241259.Google Scholar
Aufstand und Zwangsumsiedlung: Die kubanischen Unabhängigkeitskriege 1868–1898, Hamburg 2012.Google Scholar
Sulivan, Captain G. L., Dhow Chasing in Zanzibar Waters and on the Eastern Coast of Africa: Narrative of Five Years’ Experiences in the Suppression of the Slave Trade, London 1873.Google Scholar
Swaminathan, Srividhya, Debating the Slave Trade: Rhetoric of British National Identity, 1759–1815, Farnham 2009.Google Scholar
Swatek-Evenstein, Mark, A History of Humanitarian Intervention, Cambridge 2020. Google Scholar
Sylvester, Harold J., The Kansas Press and the Coming of the Spanish–American War, The Historian 31/2 (February 1969), 251267.Google Scholar
Taithe, Bertrand, Evil, Liberalism and the Imperial Designs of the Catholic Church, 1867–1905, in Taithe, Bertrand/Crook, Tom/Gill, Rebecca (eds.), Evil, Barbarism and Empire: Britain and Abroad, c. 1830–2000, Basingstoke 2011, 147171.Google Scholar
Taithe, Bertrand, Missionary Militarism? The Armed Brothers of the Sahara and Léopold Joubert in the Congo, in White, Owen/Daughton, J. P. (eds.), In God’s Empire: French Missionaries and the Modern World, Oxford 2012, 129150.Google Scholar
Task, David F., The War with Spain in 1898, Lincoln, NB 1996.Google Scholar
Tatum, Edward H., To Forestall Britain’s Desings on Cuba and New World Markets, in Rappaport, Armin (ed.), The Monroe Doctrine, New York 1964, 2233.Google Scholar
Taylor, Eric Robert, If We Must Die: Shipboard Insurrections in the Era of the Atlantic Slave Trade, Baton Rouge, LA 2006.Google Scholar
Teitel, Ruti G., For Humanity, Journal of Human Rights 3/2 (June 2004), 225237.Google Scholar
Temperley, Harold, The Foreign Policy of Canning 1822–1827: England, the Neo-Holy Alliance, and the New World, London 1966.Google Scholar
Temperley, Harold/Penson, Lillian M. (eds.), Foundations of British Foreign Policy: From Pitt (1792) to Salisbury (1902), Cambridge 1966.Google Scholar
Temperley, Howard, White Dreams, Black Africa: The Antislavery Expedition to the Niger 1841–1842, New Haven, CT 1991.Google Scholar
Tesón, Fernando R., Humanitarian Intervention: An Inquiry into Law and Morality, Ardsley, NY 2005.Google Scholar
Tesón, Fernando R./van der Vossen, Bas, Debating Humanitarian Intervention: Should We Try to Save Strangers?, New York 2017.Google Scholar
Thakur, Ramesh, Global Norms and International Humanitarian Law: An Asian Perspective, International Review of the Red Cross 841 (31 March 2001), https://www.icrc.org/eng/resources/documents/article/other/57jqzd.htm.Google Scholar
The Responsibility to Protect: Norms, Laws, and the Use of Force in International Politics, London 2011.Google Scholar
R2P after Libya and Syria: Engaging Emerging Powers, Washington Quarterly 36/2 (Spring 2013), 6176.Google Scholar
The United Nations, Peace and Security: From Collective Security to the Responsibility to Protect, Cambridge 2017.Google Scholar
Thomas, Hugh, The Slave Trade: The History of the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1440–1870, London 2006.Google Scholar
Thompson, Andrew, Informal Empire: Past, Present and Future, in Brown, Matthew (ed.), Informal Empire in Latin America: Culture, Commerce and Capital, Malden, MA 2008, 229241.Google Scholar
Humanitarian Interventions, Past and Present, in Klose, Fabian (ed.), The Emergence of Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas and Practice from the Nineteenth Century to the Present, Cambridge 2016, 331356.Google Scholar
Thompson, Andrew C., The Protestant Interest and the History of Humanitarian Intervention, c. 1685–c. 1756, in Simms, Brendan/Trim, David J. B. (eds.), Humanitarian Intervention: A History, Cambridge 2011, 6788.Google Scholar
Thornberry, Patrick, International Law and the Rights of Minorities, Oxford 1991.Google Scholar
Thornton, John, Africa and Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World, 1400–1800, Cambridge 1998.Google Scholar
Todd, Janet. Sensibility: An Introduction, London 1986.Google Scholar
Toledano, Ehud R., The Ottoman Slave Trade and Its Suppression: 1840–1890, Princeton, NJ 1982.Google Scholar
Tomkins, Stephen, The Clapham Sect: How Wilberforce’s Circle Transformed Britain, Oxford 2010.Google Scholar
Tone, John Lawrence, War and Genocide in Cuba, 1895–1898, Chapel Hill, NC 2006.Google Scholar
Toufayan, Mark, Empathy, Humanity and the ‘Armenian Question’ in the Internationalist Legal Imagination, Revue québécoise de droit international 24 (2011), 171192.Google Scholar
Trim, David J. B., ‘If a prince use tyrannie towards his people’: Interventions on Behalf of Foreign Populations in Early Modern Europe, in Trim, David J. B./Simms, Brendan (eds.), Humanitarian Intervention: A History, Cambridge 2011, 2966.Google Scholar
Conclusion: Humanitarian Intervention in Historical Perspective, in Trim, David J. B/Simms, Brendan (eds.), Humanitarian Intervention: A History, Cambridge 2011, 381401.Google Scholar
Intervention in European History c. 1520–1850, in Recchia, Stefano/Welsh, Jennifer M (eds.), Just and Unjust Military Intervention: European Thinkers from Vitoria to Mill, Cambridge 2013, 2147.Google Scholar
Tuck, Richard, Grotius, Hobbes, and Pufendorf on Humanitarian Intervention, in Recchia, Stefano/Welsh, Jennifer M. (eds.), Just and Unjust Military Intervention: European Thinkers from Vitoria to Mill, Cambridge 2013, 96112.Google Scholar
Tupper, H. Allen, Jr, Columbia’s War for Cuba: A Story of the Early Struggles of the Cuban Patriots, and of all the Important Events Leading Up to the Present War between the United States and Spain for Cuba Libre, New York 1898.Google Scholar
Turley, David, The Culture of English Antislavery, 1780–1860, London 1991.Google Scholar
Anti-Slavery Activists and Officials: ‘Influence’, Lobbying and the Slave Trade, 1807–1850, in Hamilton, Keith/Salmon, Patrick (eds.), Slavery, Diplomacy and Empire: Britain and the Suppression of the Slave Trade, 1807–1975, Eastbourne 2009, 8192.Google Scholar
Turnbull, David, Travels in the West: Cuba with Notices of Puerto Rico and the Slave Trade, London 1840.Google Scholar
Tusan, Michelle, Britain and the Middle East: New Historical Perspectives on the Eastern Question, History Compass 8/3 (March 2010), 212222.Google Scholar
Ashes, Smyrna’s: Humanitarianism, Genocide, and the Birth of the Middle East, Berkeley, CA 2012.Google Scholar
Crimes against Humanity’: Human Rights, the British Empire, and the Origins of the Response to the Armenian Genocide, American Historical Review 119/1 (February 2014), 4777.Google Scholar
Tyrrell, Ian, Reforming the World: The Creation of America’s Moral Empire, Princeton, NJ 2010.Google Scholar
Urban, C. Stanley, The Africanization of Cuba Scare, 1853–1855, Hispanic American Historical Review 37/1 (February 1957), 2945.Google Scholar
Uya, Okon E., Slave Revolts in the Middle Passage: A Neglected Theme, Calabar Historical Journal 1/1 (June 1976), 6588.Google Scholar
Vacalopoulos, Apostolos E., Piracy during the Last Years of the Greek War of Independence, in Vacalopoulos, Apostolos E./Svolopoulos, Constantinos D./Király, Béla K. (eds.), Southeast European Maritime Commerce and Naval Policies from the Mid-Eighteenth Century to 1914, Boulder, CO 1988, 363377.Google Scholar
Van Alstyne, Richard W., The British Right of Search and the African Slave Trade, Journal of Modern History 2/1 (March 1930), 3747.Google Scholar
Van Cleve, George, ‘Somerset’s Case’ and Its Antecedents in Imperial Perspective, Law and History Review 24/3 (Spring 2006), 601645.Google Scholar
Van der Linden, Marcel, Unanticipated Consequences of ‘Humanitarian Intervention’: The British Campaign to Abolish the Slave Trade, 1807–1900, Theory and Society 39/3–4 (2010), 281298.Google Scholar
Van Niekerk, J. P., British, Portuguese, and American Judges in Adderley Street: the International Legal Background to and Some Judicial Aspects of the Cape Town Mixed Commissions for the Suppression of the Transatlantic Slave Trade in the Nineteenth Century (pt. 1), Comparative and International Law Journal of Southern Africa 37/1 (March 2004), 139.Google Scholar
Van Niekerk, J. P., British, Portuguese, and American Judges in Adderley Street: the International Legal Background to and Some Judicial Aspects of the Cape Town Mixed Commissions for the Suppression of the Transatlantic Slave Trade in the Nineteenth Century (pt. 2), Comparative and International Law Journal of Southern Africa 37/2 (July 2004), 196225.Google Scholar
Van Niekerk, J. P., The Role of the Vice-Admiralty Court at St Helena in the Abolition of the Transatlantic Slave Trade: A Preliminary Investigation, pt. 1, Fundamina: A Journal of Legal History 15/1 (2009), 69111.Google Scholar
Van Niekerk, J. P., The Role of the Vice-Admiralty Court at St Helena in the Abolition of the Transatlantic Slave Trade: A Preliminary Investigation, pt. 2, Fundamina: A Journal of Legal History 15/2 (2009), 156.Google Scholar
Van Nifterik, Gustaaf P., Religious and Humanitarian Intervention in Sixteenth and Early Seventeenth-Century Legal Thought, in Lesaffer, Randall/Macours, Georges (eds.), Sovereignty and the Law of Nations (16th–18th Centuries), Brussels 2006, 3560.Google Scholar
Van Wagenen, Michael Scott, Remembering the Forgotten War: The Enduring Legacies of the U.S.–Mexican War, Amherst, MA 2012.Google Scholar
Vec, Miloš, Recht und Normierung in der Industriellen Revolution: Neue Strukturen der Normsetzung in Völkerrecht, staatlicher Gesetzgebung und gesellschaftlicher Selbstnormierung, Frankfurt a. M. 2006.Google Scholar
Das Prinzip der Verkehrsfreiheit im Völkerrecht: Die Rheinschifffahrt zwischen dem Frieden von Lunéville (1801) und der Mannheimer Akte (1868), Zeitschrift für Neuere Rechtsgeschichte 3/4 (2008), 221241.Google Scholar
Intervention/Nichtintervention: Verrechtlichung der Politik und Politisierung des Völkerrechts im 19. Jahrhundert, in Lappenküper, Ulrich/Marcowitz, Reiner (eds.), Macht und Recht: Völkerrecht in den internationalen Beziehungen, Paderborn 2010, 135160.Google Scholar
Vick, Brian E., The Congress of Vienna: Power and Politics after Napoleon, Cambridge, MA 2014.Google Scholar
Power, Humanitarianism and the Global Liberal Order: Abolition and the Barbary Corsairs in the Vienna Congress System, International History Review 40/4 (2018), 939-960.Google Scholar
The London Ambassadors’ Conferences and Beyond: Abolition, Barbary Corsairs and Multilateral Security in the Congress of Vienna System, in Vick, Brian E./Graaf, Beatrice de/Haan, Ido de (eds), Securing Europe after Napoleon: 1815 and the New European Security Culture, Cambridge 2019, 114-129.Google Scholar
Vincent, R. J., Nonintervention and International Order, Princeton, NJ 1974.Google Scholar
Grotius, Human Rights, and Intervention, in Bull, Hedley/Kingsbury, Benedict/Roberts, Adam (eds.), Hugo Grotius and International Relations, Oxford 2003, 241256.Google Scholar
Von Bippen, Wilhelm, Johann Smidt ein hanseatischer Staatsmann, Stuttgart 1921.Google Scholar
Von Gentz, Friedrich, Bemerkungen über das Interventions-Recht, March 1831, in Schlesier, Gustav (ed.), Schriften von Friedrich von Gentz. Ein Denkmal, Fünfter Teil, Mannheim 1840, 181185.Google Scholar
Von Kamptz, Karl Christoph Albert Heinrich, Völkerrechtliche Erörterungen des Rechts der Europäischen Mächte in die Verfassungen eines einzelnen Staats sich zu mischen, Berlin 1821.Google Scholar
Von Lingen, Kerstin, Fullfilling the Martens Clause: Debating ‘Crimes against Humanity’, 1899–1945, in Klose, Fabian/Thulin, Miriam (eds.), Humanity: A History of European Concepts in Practice from the Sixteenth Century to the Present, Göttingen 2017, 187208.Google Scholar
Von Pufendorf, Samuel, Of the Law of Nature and Nations: Eight Books, Oxford 1710.Google Scholar
Von Ungern-Sternberg, Antje, Religion and Religious Intervention, in Fassbender, Bardo/Peters, Anne (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of the History of International Law, Oxford 2012, 294316.Google Scholar
Wadström, Carl Bernhard, Observations on the Slave Trade, and a Description of Some Part of the Coast of 1788, in: Company with Doctor A. Sparrman and Captain Arrehenius, London 1789.Google Scholar
Plan for a Free Community at Sierra Leona, upon the Coast of Africa, under the Protection of Great Britain; with an Invitation to all Persons Desirous of Partaking the Benefits Thereof, London 1792.Google Scholar
An Essay on Colonization, Particularly Applied to the Western Coast of Africa, with Some Free Thoughts on Cultivation and Commerce, London 1794.Google Scholar
Adresse au corps législatif et au directoire exécutif de la République Française, Paris 1795.Google Scholar
Walker, Peter/Maxwell, Daniel, Shaping the Humanitarian World, New York 2009.Google Scholar
Walvin, James, The Public Campaign in England against Slavery, 1787–1834, in Walvin, James/Eltis, David (eds.), The Abolition of the Atlantic Slave Trade: Origins and Effects in Europe, Africa, and the Americas, Madison, WI 1981, 6768.Google Scholar
The Propaganda of Anti-Slavery, in Walvin, James (ed.), Slavery and British Society 1776–1846, London 1982.Google Scholar
England, Slaves and Freedom, 1776–1838, Jackson, MS 1986.Google Scholar
The Trader, the Owner, the Slave: Parallel Lives in the Age of Slavery, London 2007.Google Scholar
Walzer, Michael, Just and Unjust Wars: A Moral Argument with Historical Illustrations, New York 2000.Google Scholar
Ward, William E. F., The Royal Navy and the Slavers: The Suppression of the Atlantic Slave Trade, London 1969.Google Scholar
Warren, Aiden/Grenfell, Damian (eds.), Rethinking Humanitarian Intervention in the 21st Century, Edinburgh 2017.Google Scholar
Wasserstrom, Jeffrey N./Grandin, Greg/Hunt, Lynn/Young, Marilyn B. (eds.), Human Rights and Revolution, Lanham, MD 2007.Google Scholar
Watenpaugh, Keith David, Bread from Stones: The Middle East and the Making of Modern Humanitarianism, Oakland, CA 2015.Google Scholar
Wax, Darold D., Negro Resistance to the Early American Slave Trade, Journal of Negro History 51/1 (January 1966), 115.Google Scholar
Webster, Charles K. (ed.), British Diplomacy 1813–1815: Select Documents Dealing with the Reconstruction of Europe, London 1921.Google Scholar
Webster, Charles K., The Foreign Policy of Castlereagh 1812–1815: Britain and the Reconstruction of Europe, London 1931.Google Scholar
The Foreign Policy of Castlereagh 1815–1822: Britain and the European Alliance, London [1925] 1963.Google Scholar
Britain and the Independence of Latin America 1812–1830, 2 vols., New York 1970.Google Scholar
Webster, Charles K. (ed.), British Diplomacy 1813–1815: Select Documents Dealing with the Reconstruction of Europe, London 1921.Google Scholar
Webster, Jane, The Zong in the Context of the Eighteen-Century Slave Trade, Journal of Legal History 28/3 (2007), 285298.Google Scholar
Weinbren, Dan, Against All Cruelty: The Humanitarian League, 1891–1919, History Workshop 38 (1994), 86105.Google Scholar
Weisberg, Howard L., The Congo Crisis 1964: A Case Study in Humanitarian Intervention, Virginia Journal of International Law 12/2 (1972), 261276.Google Scholar
Weiss, Thomas G., Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas in Action, Cambridge 2012.Google Scholar
Weiss, Thomas G./Forsythe, David P./Coate, Roger A., The United Nations and Changing World Politics, Boulder, CO 2004.Google Scholar
Weissman, Fabrice (ed.), In the Shadow of ‘Just Wars’: Violence, Politics, and Humanitarian Action, London 2004.Google Scholar
Wester, Karin, Intervention in Libya: The Responsibility to Protect in North Africa, Cambridge 2020.Google Scholar
Weitz, Eric D., From the Vienna to the Paris System: International Politics and the Entangled Histories of Human Rights, Forced Deportations, and Civilizing Missions, American Historical Review 113/5 (December 2008), 13131343.Google Scholar
Weitz, Eric D., A World Divided: The Global Struggle for Human Rights in the Age of Nation-States, Princeton, NJ 2019.Google Scholar
Welch, Richard E. Jr, American Atrocities in the Philippines: The Indictment and the Response, Pacific Historical Review 43/2 (May 1974), 233253.Google Scholar
Welch, Richard E. Response to Imperialism, The United States and the Philippine–American War, 1899–1902, Chapel Hill, NC 1979.Google Scholar
Welsh, Jennifer M., Humanitarian Intervention and International Relations, Oxford 2006.Google Scholar
Edmund Burke and Intervention: Empire and Neighborhood, in Welsh, Jennifer M/Recchia, Stefano (eds.), Just and Unjust Military Intervention: European Thinkers from Vitoria to Mill, Cambridge 2013, 219236.Google Scholar
Wenzlhuemer, Roland, Connecting the Nineteenth-Century World: The Telegraph and Globalization, Cambridge 2013.Google Scholar
Wertheim, Stephen, A Solution from Hell: The United States and the Rise of Humanitarian Intervention, 1991–2003, Journal of Genocide Research 12/3–4 (September–December 2010), 149172.Google Scholar
Western, Jon, Prudence or Outrage? Public Opinion and Humanitarian Intervention in Historical and Comparative Perspective, in Klose, Fabian (ed.), The Emergence of Humanitarian Intervention: Ideas and Practice from the Nineteenth Century to the Present, Cambridge 2016, 165184.Google Scholar
Wheaton, Henry, A Digest of the Law of Maritime Captures and Prizes, New York 1815.Google Scholar
Wheaton, Henry, Elements of International Law with a Sketch of the History of the Science, vol. I, London 1836.Google Scholar
Wheaton, Henry, Enquiry into the Validity of the British Claim to a Right of Visitation and Search of American Vessel Suspected to be Engaged in the African Slave Trade, Philadelphia, PA 1842.Google Scholar
Wheaton, Henry, History of the Law of Nations in Europe and America from the Earliest Times to the Treaty of Washington, 1842, New York 1845.Google Scholar
Wheeler, Nicolas J., Saving Strangers: Humanitarian Intervention in International Society, Oxford 2003.Google Scholar
Wheeler, Nicolas J./Morris, Justin, Justifying the Iraq War as a Humanitarian Intervention: The Cure Is Worse than the Disease, in Thakur, Ramesh/Sidhu, W. P. S. (eds.), The Iraq Crisis and World Order: Structural, Institutional and Normative Challenges, Tokyo 2006, 444463.Google Scholar
Whitaker, Arthur, The Western Hemisphere Idea: Its Rise and Decline, Ithaca, NY 1954.Google Scholar
Whitaker, Arthur, The United States and the Independence of Latin America, 1800–1830, New York 1964.Google Scholar
White, Mark J., The Case of the Yucatecan Request: American Foreign Policy at the Close of the Mexican War, Mid-America. An Historical Review 72/3 (October 1990), 169190.Google Scholar
Wilberforce, Robert I./Wilberforce, Samuel (eds.), The Life of William Wilberforce, vol. 1, London 1838.Google Scholar
Wilberforce, Robert I./Wilberforce, Samuel The Life of William Wilberforce, vol. 2, London 1838.Google Scholar
Wilberforce, Robert I./Wilberforce, Samuel The Life of William Wilberforce, vol. 4, London 1839.Google Scholar
Wilkerson, Marcus M., Public Opinion and the Spanish–American War: A Study in War Propaganda, New York 1967.Google Scholar
Williams, Eric E., Capitalism and Slavery, Chapel Hill, NC 1944.Google Scholar
Williams, Raymond, Keywords: A Vocabulary of Culture and Society, New York 1976. Google Scholar
Williams, William Appleman, The Tragedy of American Diplomacy, New York 2009.Google Scholar
Wills, Mary, Envoys of Abolition: British Naval Officers and the Campaign against the Slave Trade in West Africa, Liverpool 2020.Google Scholar
Wilson, Ellen Gibson, Thomas Clarkson: A Biography, New York 1990.Google Scholar
Wilson, Howard Hazen, Some Principal Aspects of British Efforts to Crush the African Slave Trade, 1807–1929, American Journal of International Law 44/3 (July 1950), 505526.Google Scholar
Wilson, J. Leighton, The British Squadron on the Coast of Africa, London 1850.Google Scholar
Wilson, J. Leighton, The British Squadron on the Coast of Africa, by the Rev. J. Leighton Wilson, An American Missionary in the Gaboon River, West Coast of Africa, with Notes by Captain H. D. Trotter, Royal Navy, London 1851.Google Scholar
Wilson, Peter, The International Theory of Leonard Woolf: A Study in Twentieth-Century Idealism, New York 2003.Google Scholar
Wilson, Richard Ashby/Brown, Richard D., Introduction, in Wilson, Richard Ashby/Brown, Richard D. (eds.), Humanitarianism and Suffering: The Mobilization of Empathy, Cambridge 2009, 130.Google Scholar
Winfield, Percy H., The History of Intervention in International Law, British Yearbook of International Law 130 (1922/23), 130149.Google Scholar
Wirz, Albert, Die humanitäre Schweiz im Spannungsfeld zwischen Philantrophie und Kolonialismus: Gustave Moynier, Afrika und das IKRK, Traverse: Zeitschrift für Geschichte/Revue d’histoire 5/2 (1998), 95111.Google Scholar
Wirz, Albert/Eckert, Andreas, The Scramble for Africa: Icon and Idiom of Modernity, in Pétré Grenouilleau, Olivier (ed.), From Slave Trade to Empire: Europe and the Colonisation of Black Africa 1780s–1880s, London 2004, 133153.Google Scholar
Wisan, Joseph E., The Cuban Crisis as Reflected in the New York Press (1896–1898), New York 1965.Google Scholar
Wise, Steven M., Though the Heavens May Fall: The Landmark Trial That Led to the End of Human Slavery, Cambridge, MA 2006.Google Scholar
Wiseberg, Laurie S., Humanitarian Intervention: Lessons from the Nigerian Civil War, Revue des droits de l’homme 70/1 (1974), 6198.Google Scholar
Wolff, Christian, Jus gentium methodo scientifica pertractatum, 1749, vol. II, trans. Joseph H. Drake, Oxford 1934.Google Scholar
Wolfe, John B., The Barbary Coast: Algiers under the Turks 1500 to 1830, New York 1979.Google Scholar
Wolff, Richard D., British Imperialism and the East African Slave Trade, Science & Society 36/4 (Winter 1972), 443462.Google Scholar
Wood, Marcus, Blind Memory: Visual Representation of Slavery in England and America 1780–1865, Manchester 2000.Google Scholar
Woodhouse, Christopher M., The Battle of Navarino, London 1965.Google Scholar
The Philhellenes, London 1969.Google Scholar
The Greek War of Independence: Its Historical Setting, New York 1975.Google Scholar
Woods, Joseph, Thoughts on the Slavery of the Negroes, London 1784.Google Scholar
Woolf, Leonard S., International Government: Two Reports Prepared for the Fabian Research Department, New York 1916.Google Scholar
Yellin, Jean Fagan, Women and Sisters: The Antislavery Feminists in American Culture, New Haven, CT 1989.Google Scholar
Yellin, Jean Fagan/Van Horne, John C. (eds.), The Abolitionist Sisterhood: Women’s Political Culture in Antebellum America, Ithaca, NY 1994.Google Scholar
Young, George, Corps de droit ottoman: Recueil des Codes, Lois, Règlements, Ordonnances et Actes les plus importants du Droit Intérieur, et d’Ètudes sur le Droit Coutumier de l’Empire Ottoman, vol. 2, Oxford 1905.Google Scholar
Yule, Henry, The African Squadron Vindicated, London 1850.Google Scholar
Zamoyski, Adam, Rites of Peace: The Fall of Napoleon and the Congress of Vienna, New York 2007.Google Scholar
Zimmermann, Carl R., Philhellenism in the American Press during the Greek Revolution, Neo-Hellenika 2 (1975), 181211.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Fabian Klose, Universität zu Köln
  • Book: In the Cause of Humanity
  • Online publication: 25 November 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009029186.016
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Fabian Klose, Universität zu Köln
  • Book: In the Cause of Humanity
  • Online publication: 25 November 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009029186.016
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Fabian Klose, Universität zu Köln
  • Book: In the Cause of Humanity
  • Online publication: 25 November 2021
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781009029186.016
Available formats
×