Just War Or Just Peace?: Humanitarian Intervention and International Law

Portada
Oxford University Press, 2002 - 295 páginas
Annotation The question of the legality of humanitarian intervention is, at first blush, a simple one. The Charter of the United Nations clearly prohibits the use of force, with the only exceptions being self-defence and enforcement actions authorized by the Security Council. There are, however, long-standing arguments that a right of unilateral intervention pre-existed the Charter. This book, which won the ASIL Certificate of Merit in 2002, begins with an examination of the genealogy of that right,and arguments that it might have survived the passage of the Charter, either through a loophole in Article 2(4) or as part of customary international law. It has also been argued that certain `illegitimate' regimes lose the attributes of sovereignty and thereby the protection given by the prohibition of the use of force. None of these arguments is found to have merit, either in principle or in the practice of states. A common justification for a right of unilateral humanitarian intervention concerns the failure of the collective security mechanism created after the Second World War. Chapters 4 and 5, therefore, examine Security Council activism in the 1990s, notable for the plasticity of the circumstances in which the Council was prepared to assert its primary responsibility for international peace and security, and the contingency of its actions on the willingness of states to carry them out. This reduction of the Council's role from substantive to formal partly explains the recourse to unilateralism in that decade, most spectacularly in relation to the situation in Kosovo. Crucially, the book argues that such unilateral enforcement is not a substitute for but the opposite of collective action. Though often presented as the only alternative to inaction, incorporating a `right' of intervention would lead to more such interventions being undertaken in bad faith, it would be incoherent as a principle, and it would be inimical to the emergence of an international rule of law.
 

Contenido

Introduction
1
Nonintervention
7
52
13
Humanitarian intervention in the early twentieth century
35
Conclusion
42
Humanitarian intervention and
45
1971
71
Conclusion
86
Unilateral intervention to promote democracy
88
Threats to international peace
112
The delegation of Security Council
163
Just War or Just Peace? Humanitarian intervention
219
Appendices
237
Bibliography
260
Index
283
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Acerca del autor (2002)

Simon Chesterman is a Senior Associate at the International Peace Academy in New York

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