The United Nations and the new world order for a new millenium : : self-determination, state succession, and humanitarian intervention / / Edward McWhinney.

The errors - military, political, and not least diplomatic - in the continuing unfolding of the Yugoslav tragedy over the decade since the Fall of the Berlin Wall and the final ending of the Cold War, offer certain lessons. It had been confidently predicted that the complex, multi-national Yugoslav...

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Superior document:Nijhoff Law Specials ; 44
VerfasserIn:
Place / Publishing House:The Hague, Netherlands : : Kluwer Law International,, [2000]
©2000
Year of Publication:2000
Language:English
Series:Nijhoff law specials ; 44.
Physical Description:1 online resource.
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520 |a The errors - military, political, and not least diplomatic - in the continuing unfolding of the Yugoslav tragedy over the decade since the Fall of the Berlin Wall and the final ending of the Cold War, offer certain lessons. It had been confidently predicted that the complex, multi-national Yugoslav state created by the World War I victors at Versailles in 1919, and continued by the post-World War II peace settlements, would not long survive Marshal Tito's death. As it happened, when the moment of truth arrived the concert of Western European powers had no clear and coherent plans ready for a rational brokering of the resulting problems of State Succession, including renewed federal or confederal structures, and peaceful and orderly transfer and relocation of civil populations if fragmentation and independence were to be the immediate policy options. The rush to a 'premature' State Recognition by one or more leading Western European political players, without having any congress of Berlin-style game-plan ready to guide and direct this, may have triggered the on-rush of political and military events that led, in quick succession, to the Bosnian and then the Kosovo tragedies of the 1990s. The author, currently President of the Institut de Droit International and a jurisconsult and advisor, over the years, to international and national governmental authorities, examines consequences and challenges for International Law and Law-making, as we enter the new Millennium. Taking note of the antinomies and contradictions inherent in Classical International Law Categories like Territorial Integrity and the Self-determination of Peoples, the Non-Use-of-Force and Collective (regional) Self-Defence, the author considers, in particular, the direct conflict, in the case of both Bosnia and Kosovo, between the United Nations Charter principle of Non-Intervention and the claimed 'New' International Law principle of Humanitarian Intervention. The legally permissible modalities and structures and processes for exercise of Humanitarian Intervention, in accord with the United Nations Charter and also general International Law, are canvassed and weighed. 
504 |a Includes bibliographical references and index. 
505 0 |a Dedication. Acknowledgements. Foreword: Failed federal solution for a `difficult' society. I. End of the Millennium: an era of historical transition. II. The paradigm shift in international law and relations. III. The post-Cold War era: the end of the `End of History'. IV. Paradigm competition in an era of transition: changing societal trends and conditions. V. Antinomies and contradictions in contemporary international law. VI. International Law-making Process for a New World Order: the War of the Yugoslav Succession. Notes. Documents. Index. 
588 |a Description based on print version record. 
650 0 |a International relations. 
650 0 |a Self-determination, National. 
650 0 |a State succession. 
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