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This book discusses the many legal aspects arising in relation to
the maintenance of peace in Africa. Over the past twenty years, the
majority of peace operations have been deployed on this continent,
most of them established by the UN Security Council, sometimes in
cooperation with the African Union and other African regional
organizations, with contributions from the European Union and NATO.
In some cases, the African Union has invoked its 'primary
responsibility for promoting peace, security and stability in
Africa', thus questioning the legal partnership between UN and
regional organizations provided for in Chapter VIII of the UN
Charter. The peace operations deployed in Africa have sometimes
received a very robust mandate, which also includes the use of
force and the protection of civilians' human rights. The
implementation of this broad mandate, which goes well beyond the
traditional 'peacekeeping approach', requires considerable human
and economic resources. Moreover, it raises several issues of
concern with regard to the impact on the economic and political
systems of the states in which the operations are deployed and,
more generally, on the exercise of sovereignty over their
territorial communities by these states. Offering an update for
lawyers in practice and in academia interested in the field of
international law, the book also contributes to the theoretical
studies concerning the activities of international organizations,
focusing on one of the most challenging issues to emerge in recent
times.
This book discusses the many legal aspects arising in relation to
the maintenance of peace in Africa. Over the past twenty years, the
majority of peace operations have been deployed on this continent,
most of them established by the UN Security Council, sometimes in
cooperation with the African Union and other African regional
organizations, with contributions from the European Union and NATO.
In some cases, the African Union has invoked its 'primary
responsibility for promoting peace, security and stability in
Africa', thus questioning the legal partnership between UN and
regional organizations provided for in Chapter VIII of the UN
Charter. The peace operations deployed in Africa have sometimes
received a very robust mandate, which also includes the use of
force and the protection of civilians' human rights. The
implementation of this broad mandate, which goes well beyond the
traditional 'peacekeeping approach', requires considerable human
and economic resources. Moreover, it raises several issues of
concern with regard to the impact on the economic and political
systems of the states in which the operations are deployed and,
more generally, on the exercise of sovereignty over their
territorial communities by these states. Offering an update for
lawyers in practice and in academia interested in the field of
international law, the book also contributes to the theoretical
studies concerning the activities of international organizations,
focusing on one of the most challenging issues to emerge in recent
times.
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