The legality and legitimacy of the use of force in Northeast Asia / edited by Brendan Howe, Boris Kondoch.

In The Legality and Legitimacy of the Use of Force in Northeast Asia , Brendan Howe and Boris Kondoch bring together distinguished authors with extensive Northeast Asian backgrounds to offer a diverse and comprehensive evaluation of when it is right, from regional perspectives, to use force in inter...

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Year of Publication:2013
Language:English
Series:Studies in East Asian security and international relations, v. 2
Studies on East Asian Security and International Relations 2.
Physical Description:1 online resource (306 p.)
Notes:Title from PDF title page (viewed on July 26, 2013).
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Other title:Preliminary Material /
Introduction /
Aggression, the Prohibition of the Use of Force and Northeast Asia /
East Asian Values and Humanitarian Intervention /
Between Harmonious World and “War of Order”: Chinese Meanings of Just War and Their Reemergence /
From Ideology to Pragmatism: China’s Position on Humanitarian Intervention in the Post-Cold War Era /
The Paradox of Non-use of “Use of Force” Option in Japan’s Foreign and Security Policy Consensus /
“The Crime of Aggression” and Japan /
Questioning the Legality and Legitimacy of a Preventive Strike by the U.S. to Disarm North Korea of Nuclear Weapons /
Bibliography /
Index /
Summary:In The Legality and Legitimacy of the Use of Force in Northeast Asia , Brendan Howe and Boris Kondoch bring together distinguished authors with extensive Northeast Asian backgrounds to offer a diverse and comprehensive evaluation of when it is right, from regional perspectives, to use force in international relations. The use of force in international relations has been severely curtailed by pragmatic considerations of international order, and further constrained by positive international law. In Northeast Asia, the prohibition of aggression has remained uncontested. Strict adherence to non-intervention in Northeast Asia has, however, increasingly come under attack from internal and external normative communities. The contributors, therefore, use regional legal, normative, cultural, and historical insights to shed light on the contemporary positions of Northeast Asian political communities with regard to the use of force.
Bibliography:Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN:9004249052
ISSN:2213-1051 ;
Hierarchical level:Monograph
Statement of Responsibility: edited by Brendan Howe, Boris Kondoch.