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Reappraising the Resort to Force - International Law, Jus ad Bellum and the War on Terror (Hardcover, New)
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Reappraising the Resort to Force - International Law, Jus ad Bellum and the War on Terror (Hardcover, New)
Series: Studies in International Law
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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A number of commentators assert that the military response to the
terrorist atrocities of 11 September 2001 - encompassing attacks on
Afghanistan and Iraq, and commonly referred to as the 'war on
terror' - has significantly impacted upon the international law
regulating resort to armed force by states (jus ad bellum),
loosening the constraints on self-defence. Some even suggest that
the very future of the United Nations, in particular the Security
Council and its collective security system, is at risk - at least
in its current form. This book does not address the question of the
future of the United Nations, an issue probably best left to
scholars of international relations. Instead, it seeks to place the
'war on terror' within the context of international law, assessing
how, or whether, it can be accommodated within the existing legal
framework limiting the use of force. Through an examination of the
lawfulness (or otherwise) of both Operation Enduring Freedom and
Operation Iraqi Freedom, including the legal justifications
advanced by those states involved and the reaction of the
international community, and involving a detailed discussion of the
most important developments (ie, the permissibility of self-defence
against non-state, terrorist, actors and the 'Bush doctrine' of
pre-emptive self-defence against terrorists as proclaimed in the
2002 US National Security Strategy) the book determines whether,
and to what extent, the right to use force - or the acceptability
of such military action - is currently undergoing a radical
transformation. By assessing subsequent developments illustrating
the impact that military action against Afghanistan and Iraq has
had on the jus ad bellum, this book represents a distinctive and
original contribution to the academic literature.
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