Fachbuch, 2008
69 Seiten
Jura - Europarecht, Völkerrecht, Internationales Privatrecht
Preface
Chapter 1 – Introduction: Human Rights in Foreign Policy and International Relations
I. Human Rights as a concern in international relations
II. Obstacles on the Road to enduring International Peace and Security and Universal Respect for Human Rights
III. Sovereignty and Human Rights
Chapter 2 – The First Dimension: Peace as a prerequisite for the complete enjoyment of all Human Rights
Chapter 3 – The Second Dimension: Massive Violations of Human Rights as a threat to international peace and security
Chapter 4 - The Third Dimension: The use of force against other states for the protection of Human Rights
I. Introduction: The General Prohibition of the Use of Armed Force
II. Current possibilities for responses to atrocities
1. UN Security Council: Chapter VII
2. UN General Assembly: Uniting for Peace
III. The emerging concept of Humanitarian Intervention outside the UN framework - Legal, Moral and Political Considerations
1. Introduction
a) What is Humanitarian Intervention ?
b) Humanitarian Intervention in the past and today
c) Political and Legal Considerations on Humanitarian Intervention de lege lata and de lege ferenda
2. Political and moral aspects of Humanitarian Intervention
3. The legality of Humanitarian Intervention under current International Law
a) State sovereignty and Art. 2 (4) UN Charter
b) Justification under already existing rules of international law ?
aa) Justification under the UN Charter ?
bb) The position of the International Court of Justice
cc) The concept of reprisals as legal ground for a justification of Humanitarian Interventions under international law
dd) A "state of necessity" as the justification for Humanitarian Intervention
ee) Customary Law: Humanitarian Intervention in state practice after 1945
ff) Conclusion: The need for legal reform
4. The emerging concept of Humanitarian Intervention: criteria for the legality of Humanitarian Intervention
a) The need for criteria and the possibility to find them
b) Massive and systematic Human Rights violations
aa) Genocide
bb) Crimes against humanity
cc) War crimes
dd) Feasibility of a wide acceptance of the "Article 5 - solution"
ee) Effectiveness of the Article 5 - solution
ff) Conclusion
c) Failure of peaceful means of Human Rights enforcement
d) Failure of the UN Security Council
e) Failure of the UN General Assembly to act
f) Multilateralism and state interests
g) Respect for Human Rights and International Humanitarian Law
5. Conclusions
IV. Conclusion: A proposal for a general procedure for the enforcement of Human Rights
Chapter 5 – Conclusions
The primary objective of this book is to examine how the requirements for universal respect for Human Rights and the maintenance of international peace and security can be reconciled under international law. The central research focus lies on the legality of the use of force for the protection of Human Rights, specifically investigating under which conditions such interventions are permissible when the UN Security Council fails to take action.
I. Human Rights as a concern in international relations
Since 1945 the growth of a language and practice of universal Human Rights have more and more become a matter of concern in international relations and the idea of Human Rights shaped the international community and its “moral imagination” more than anything else after World War II and the impact of the inclusion of Human Rights in International Law is second only to the ius cogens prohibition of the use of force in terms of the importance in the context of the development of international law in the 20th century.
International politics reflect this change: Economic cooperation, e.g. between the EU and third nations, is used to exercise pressure in favor of human rights, international organizations such as the UN, OSCE or EU, which originated from security or economic interests, have become platforms for the promotion of human rights etc. Yet there remain obstacles on the road to both enduring international peace and security and universal respect for human rights.
Chapter 1 – Introduction: Human Rights in Foreign Policy and International Relations: This chapter contextualizes the rise of Human Rights in international relations since 1945 and identifies the core challenges of reconciling state sovereignty with universal rights.
Chapter 2 – The First Dimension: Peace as a prerequisite for the complete enjoyment of all Human Rights: This section establishes that international peace and security are interdependent with the full realization of Human Rights, noting that conflicts often necessitate the derogation of specific legal protections.
Chapter 3 – The Second Dimension: Massive Violations of Human Rights as a threat to international peace and security: This chapter analyzes how gross human rights abuses are recognized by the UN as threats to global security, necessitating intervention.
Chapter 4 - The Third Dimension: The use of force against other states for the protection of Human Rights: This central chapter explores the legality of Humanitarian Intervention, the role of the UN Security Council, and the criteria for potential future legal frameworks.
Chapter 5 – Conclusions: This chapter summarizes the necessity of reconciling peace and human rights, suggesting that a new rule of customary international law may be required to address cases where the UN remains deadlocked.
Humanitarian Intervention, International Law, Human Rights, UN Charter, State Sovereignty, International Security, Use of Force, Chapter VII, Ius Cogens, Humanitarian Crisis, Customary Law, Peace, Multilateralism, Accountability, Rome Statute.
The book addresses the legal and moral dilemmas surrounding the protection of Human Rights through military intervention, specifically when international bodies like the UN Security Council are unable to act.
The central themes include the evolution of Human Rights in international relations, the tension between Westphalian sovereignty and universal human rights, and the procedural failures of current international enforcement mechanisms.
The goal is to determine if and how the use of force for human rights protection can be legally reconciled with the prohibition of the use of force under the UN Charter.
The author employs a legal-analytical approach, examining international treaties, UN resolutions, state practice, and the interpretations of international law by bodies like the International Court of Justice.
The text examines the "three dimensions" of human rights and peace, analyzes the limitations of Chapter VII of the UN Charter, and explores the feasibility of criteria for "Humanitarian Intervention" as a future rule of customary law.
Key concepts include Humanitarian Intervention, International Law, Sovereignty, and the UN Charter.
The author highlights the severe limitations of the Security Council's decision-making process, specifically the veto power, which often prevents effective action against massive human rights violations.
The author proposes a tiered enforcement procedure, beginning at the national level, progressing to regional mechanisms, and relying on global frameworks as a last resort, emphasizing the principle of subsidiarity.
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