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The application of the principle of complementarity in situations referred to the International Criminal Court by the United Nations Security Council and in self-referred situationsZimba, Gamaliel January 2012 (has links)
Magister Legum - LLM
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The role of nonpermanent members on the United Nations Security Council: The case of Sweden 2017Lundin, Johan January 2018 (has links)
This thesis investigates the role nonpermanent members have on the United Nations Security Council (UNSC). This as the contemporary scholarly debate on the UNSC tends to exclude the nonpermanent members in the study of the only international institution that can bind all UN members under its decisions. Building on the slim literature existing on why states seek the nonpermanent seats, this thesis uses the case of Sweden in order to investigate whether Sweden has met its objectives during its first year on the council. This case also contributes to a broader question of the potential influence nonpermanent members can have on the council. The results of this thesis are in line with the research it is building on, inherited from a liberal strand of international relations, that Sweden has influenced outcomes in line with its objectives and that nonpermanent members can influence the council in terms of resolutions, making them relevant to study in research concerning the UNSC. It also provides additional knowledge to the existing research it is building on by expanding the scope in how nonpermanent members can influence the council, which can be used in future studies.
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Keeping the peacekeepers away from the court : the United States of America, the International Criminal Court and UN Security Council Resolution 1422Dovey, Kathryn January 2003 (has links)
No description available.
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BEHIND CLOSED DOORS: INFORMAL GOVERNANCE AND AGENDA-SETTING IN THE UNITED NATIONS SECURITY COUNCILKasparek, Stefanie I., 0000-0003-4850-6687 08 1900 (has links)
The UN Security Council (UNSC) is a crucial international decision-making body that deals with a range of conflicts requiring consideration. However, its formal issue consideration has remained stagnant, with only a few new conflicts being added to the list. This project aims to investigate the conditions under which the Council members opt for informal governance settings instead of formal ones to address global crises and argues that the official UNSC agenda is not solely shaped by the preferences of powerful states but is influenced by the Council's operational methods. To explore this, the project combines two strands of scholarship on informal governance in international organizations and introduces a rational choice framework to analyze the factors influencing governance choices. The study employs a multi-method approach, including a multinomial regression model and a case study analysis of the Rohingya crisis in Myanmar from 2017 to 2022. The findings suggest that member states select the most suitable meeting type based on Council homogeneity, information availability, and issue urgency while considering their preference for formal consideration. The Council's yearly changing membership and fluctuations in information availability prompt states to strategically shift issue consideration between formal and informal, public and private settings. Contrary to criticisms, the Council does not overlook specific crises but often discusses urgent matters informally. Should member states' preference for formal issue consideration align with issue urgency that the Council shifts to formal meetings at the horseshoe table. This project sheds new light on the functioning of the UNSC and contributes novel insight into how member states' meeting choices early in the policy-making process significantly influence agenda-setting and decision-making outcomes. / Political Science
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Liberal Internationalism's Cheshire Cat: Imperialism, Status, and the United Nations Security CouncilDunton, Caroline 16 September 2022 (has links)
The United Nations Security Council (UNSC) is a place where states can seek international status by campaigning for its ten elected seats. Beginning from this premise, in this dissertation I ask: how do states seek status through their competitions for seats on the UNSC? Drawing on the concerns of IR theorists as well as historians, this is a process-driven question. I am interested in the process of status-seeking, not simply status itself, and I am concerned with the ways that status-seeking has evolved from 1945 to the present in the lifetime of the UN. I understand status as membership in a club embedded in larger hierarchies and examine both the nature of the hierarchies and the responsibilities associated with that membership. Similarly, I take a relational view of status that is predicated on recognition and social closure.
While the UN and the UNSC are embodiments of liberal internationalism, they are also embodiments of global and historical imperialism. This imperialism structures the hierarchy under which status-seeking occurs. Status, as membership, comes with shared expectations of behaviour, responsibility, practices, and resources. I argue that status-seeking thus requires relating to these expected behaviours, responsibilities, and practices. Thus, states conduct their campaigns in terms of articulating how they plan to use their status and contribute to the UNSC's (liberal) mandate. By speaking to these liberal responsibilities and the use of status, states are also articulating their relationships to global imperialism at different points in time through the process of status-seeking. In supporting this argument, I examine Canada's nine campaigns to the UNSC in 1946, 1947, 1957, 1966, 1976, 1988, 1998, 2010, and 2020. Using a combination of historical methods (interviews, archival work, policy document analysis), I use a genealogical lens to trace the process of status-seeking in the 20th and 21st centuries.
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[en] AN ANALYSIS OF THE WITTGENSTEINIAN PROCESS OF MEANING CONSTRUCTION OF THE PRACTICES OF HUMANITARIAN INTERVENTIONS IN THE NINETIES / [pt] UMA ANÁLISE WITTGENSTEINIANA DO PROCESSO DE CONSTRUÇÃO DO SIGNIFICADO DAS PRÁTICAS DE INTERVENÇÃO HUMANITÁRIA NOS ANOS NOVENTAANA PAULA VON BOCHKOR PODCAMENI 19 August 2009 (has links)
[pt] Essa dissertação visa analisar o debate referente às tomadas de decisão para as
práticas de intervenção humanitária nos anos noventa utilizando instrumentos teóricos
provenientes da Filosofia da Linguagem de Wittgenstein. O foco investigativo se
direciona aos discursos dos membros do Conselho de Segurança das Nações Unidas
(ONU) e como estes, por meio do uso da linguagem, atribuem significados variados aos
conceitos centrais que arquitetam o entendimento acerca desta nova prática, ainda sem
conceituação formal e jurídica na diplomacia e na academia das relações internacionais.
O ponto de partida para a presente análise é a constatação da falta de definição das
práticas de intervenção, assim também, a ausência de critérios que qualifiquem os casos
de violação de direitos humanos para uma intervenção de caráter humanitário. No
entanto, enquanto a maioria dos praticantes e estudiosos de relações internacionais
aponta para os efeitos negativos da ausência de definição conceitual da prática, o
presente trabalho ressalta a condição natural da indeterminação da linguagem e enfatiza
que apenas devido à natureza porosa das palavras e o funcionamento dinâmico e
interativo da linguagem novos caminhos de significação às práticas humanas podem ser
traçados. / [en] The present work focuses on how the use of language by the Member States of
the United Nation´s Security Council during the decision making for humanitarian
interventions in the post Cold War period, can come to mean different things in
different scenarios. For this job we have used analytical tools concepts from
Wittgenstein´s Philosophy of Language, such as language games, in order to investigate
the relationship between language and things within the dynamics process of meaning
constructing. The investigation space is represented by the Security Council forum and
the negotiations of the possibility of interventions and its terms are the main focus of the
work. The dissertation starts out by characterizing the practice of humanitarian
interventions, and in addition, pointing out the absence of a conceptual definition for its
identification. According to the theoretical framework adopted in the present work,
language carries within its words a natural open texture when investigated the
relationship between words and things, and therefore, meaning can only be constructed
within a language game. By following Wittgenstein´s idea of the language games
dynamics we can begin to understand how can the same words, such as the main
concepts that construct the meaning of the practice of humanitarian interventions, can
mean different thing in different contexts, and therefore, start to wonder if a codification
of a rule for humanitarian intervention can possibly do more harm then the absence of it.
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A defining issue in a defining time : Climate change as a security threat in the United Nations Security CouncilNordlander, Måns January 2019 (has links)
No description available.
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The responsibility to protect in the context of the NATO intervention in Libya in 2011: a human rights analysisMthamo, Khayalandile Lwando January 2017 (has links)
Magister Legum - LLM (Public Law and Jurisprudence) / The international human rights architecture experienced a shift from states to individual rights
within a state. This is mainly informed by the fact that states committed human rights atrocities
against their own civilians. This necessitated a shift from an emphasis on sovereignty and noninterference
to intervention on grave human rights violations. Article 2 of the UN Charter calls
for respect of sovereignty and discourages the use of armed force against the territorial integrity of any state.1 To reinforce this position, the United Nations (UN) member states adopted the
Responsibility to Protect (R2P) doctrine through the UN World Summit outcome document in
2005. This document effectively gave the international community the right to intervene into the
affairs of a member state if the state is failing to halt human rights abuses within its territory.
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Going it alone? : an evaluation of American concerns about the international criminal courtEngelbrecht, Gysbert Adriaan 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MA)--University of Stellenbosch, 2002. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The International Criminal Court (ICC) is an exciting new development in the
international system. It is not without its detractors, however, amongst others the United
States. The fact that the United States takes a strong stance against the ICC creates
uncertainty in the international system. This uncertainty is linked to the role of the United
States as the only remaining superpower in this system.
The main concern of the United States about the ICC is that an American might be
brought before the court in terms of politically motivated charges. To illustrate this
concern, the United States offers five basic arguments. These five are condensed into
three arguments that form the main body of this thesis. They are the questions related to
the jurisdiction of the ICC, the role of the United Nations Security Council in the
functioning of the ICC, and the influence that the United States constitution might have
on the ICC. Close attention is also paid to the political implications of the stance taken by
the United States, both in terms of the specific arguments, and in general.
The different arguments are tested against certain criteria, which include the stipulations
of the ICC Statute and other counter arguments. From these comparisons, certain
evaluations can be made, from which conclusions are drawn.
For various reasons, none of the arguments put forward have merit when tested against
the stipulations of the ICC Statute. What this implies is that the United States does not
have real evidence to back its main concern about the ICC. Even though the possibility
exists that an American could be charged before the court, there are sufficient safeguards
to protect such a person from actually appearing before the court.
The very real political implication then becomes that the United States is undermining its
position and relative power in the international system by taking such a unilateral st / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die Internasionale Kriminele Hof (IKH) is 'n opwindende ontwikkeling in die
internasionale sisteem. Dit is egter nie sonder opponente nie, wat onder andere die
Verenigte State van Amerika insluit. Die feit dat Amerika so sterk standpunt teen die hof
inneem, skep onsekerheid in die internasionale sisteem. Die onsekerheid hou verband met
Amerika se rol as die enigste oorblywende supermoontheid binne die sisteem.
Amerika se hoof besorgdheid met die IKH is dat 'n Amerikaner dalk in terme van
polities-gemotiveerde aanklagte voor die hof gedaag sal word. Hierdie besorgdheid word
geïllustreer deur vyf basiese argumente wat geopper word. Hierdie argumente word in
drie spesifieke argumente wat die basis van die tesis vorm, gefokus. Die argumente is die
vrae in terms van die jurisdiksie van die IKH, die rol van die Veiligheidsraad van die
Verenigde Nasies in die funksionering van die IKH, en die invloed wat die Amerikaanse
grondwet op die IKH het. Daar word ook gekyk na die politieke implikasies van die
Amerikaanse standpunt, beide in terme van die spesifieke argumente en in die algemeen.
Die verskillende argumente word teen sekere kriteria getoets, wat die stipulasies van die
IKH Statuut en ander teenargumente behels. Vanaf hierdie vergelykings kan evaluerings
gedoen word, waarvan daar gevolgtrekkings gemaak word.
Vir verskeie redes het nie een van die spesifieke argumente meriete as dit teen die
bepalings van die IKH Statuut getoets word nie. Dit impliseer dat Amerika nie werklik
bewyse vir hul hoof besorgdheid met betrekking tot die IKH het nie. Selfs al is die
moontlikheid daar dat 'n Amerikaner wel voor die hof gedaag kan word, is daar
voldoende waarborge om so persoon teen 'n verskyning voor die hof te beskerm.
Die werklike politieke implikasie is nou dat Amerika sy posisie en relatiewe mag in die
internasionale sisteem met sy eensydige standpunt teen die IKH ondermyn. Hierdie punt
kan ook verdere uitgebreide implikasies hê.
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Peacebuilding in Mozambique with special reference to the UN policy on landmine removalVan Tonder, Delarey 12 1900 (has links)
Thesis (MPhil)--Stellenbosch University, 2000. / ENGLISH ABSTRACT: The end of the Cold War had a profound impact on the qualitative and quantitative nature of the
UN's peace and security agenda, representing a shift from traditional peacekeeping to a broader,
more ambitious and intrusive notion of peacekeeping. This evolution was marked by an expanded
UN engagement in a broad range of intra-state conflicts and characterised by UN undertakings
towards aspects of national political and socio-economic reconstruction including the evolution
of humanitarian action.
Responding to the expanded United Nations agenda for international peace and security and at
the request of the UN Security Council (UNSC) Boutros Boutros-Ghali prepared the conceptual
foundations of the UN's role in global peace and security in his seminal report, An Agenda for
Peace (July, 1992). The Secretary General outlined five inter-connected roles that he projected
the UN would play in the fast changing context of post-Cold War international politics, namely:
preventive diplomacy, peace enforcement, peacemaking, peacekeeping and post-conflict peacebuilding.
The UNSG described the newly defined concept of post-conflict peacebuilding as action organised
"(to) foster economic and social co-operation with the purpose of developing the social,
political and economic infrastructure to prevent future violence, and laying the foundations for a
durable peace."
With specific reference to landmines in An Agenda for Peace the UNSG stressed that peacebuilding
following civil war and internal strife must address the serious problem of landmines, which
remained scattered in present or former combat zones. The UNSG underscored that mine action
(demining) should be emphasised in terms of reference of peacekeeping operations which is
crucially important in the restoration of activity when peacebuilding is under way.
The United Nations involvement in the Mozambican peace process (1992-1995) has been interpreted
as the culmination of a major success story in wider peacekeeping in Africa under UN auspices
- a category of peace operation, which included peacemaking, peacekeeping, humanitarian
assistance, peacebuilding and electoral assistance. Mozambique's peace process has subsequently
been cited as a model UN peacekeeping operation which could be adapted to post-conflict situation
elsewhere.
Within the context of landmines as a threat to post-conflict peacebuilding as articulated by the
UNSG in An Agenda for Peace, the study focuses on how the United Nations implemented mine
action initiatives in operationalising the concept of peacebuilding in Mozambique. In this context,
the study reviews the UN operation in Mozambique (ONUMOZ) and its capacity, responsiveness
and vision in implementing mine action initiatives, both in terms of the operational requirements
of the ONUMOZ peacekeeping mission and the development oflonger-term humanitarian mine
action programmes in Mozambique. To this end, the study views the establishment of a sustainable
indigenous mine action capacity as a sine que non for post -conflict peacebuilding.
From this perspective, the study interprets the 1999 Mine Ban Treaty Prohibiting the Use, Stockpile,
Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on their Destruction and the rights
and obligations of Mozambique as a State Party to the Treaty as the most appropriate instrument
towards the creation of an indigenous Mozambican mine action capacity to address the long-term
effects oflandmines on post-conflict peacebuilding.
In terms of methodology the approach was historical-analytical and in essence a deductive
method of research was followed. / AFRIKAANSE OPSOMMING: Die einde van die Koue Oorlog het diepgaande verandering teweeggebring ten opsigte van die
Verenigde Nasies se vredes en sekuriteits regime ter handhawing van internasionale vrede en
sekuriteit. Hierdie periode is gekenmerk deur 'n skerp toename in intra-staatlike konflikte en
gevolglik in die kwalitatiewe en kwantitatiewe aard en omvang van Verenigde Nasies vredesoperasies
in terme van die VN Handves.
Ten einde die verantwoordelikhede van die Verenigde Nasies met betrekking tot die handhawing
van vrede en sekuriteit in die snel - veranderende konteks van die post - Koue Oorlog periode
aan te spreek, het die Sekretaris - Generaal van die Verenigde Nasies, Boutros Boutros - Gali,
in opdrag van die Veiligheidsraad die konseptuele fundering van die VN se rol verwoord in sy
pioniersverslag - Agenda vir Vrede (1992).
In sy verslag van Julie 1992 identifiseer en omskryf die Sekretaris-Generaal vyf verbandhoudende
konsepte wat sou dien as meganismes ter beslegting van internasionale konflik, naamlik
voorkomende diplomasie (preventive diplomacy), vredesingryping (peace enforcement),
maak van vrede (peacemaking), vredesoperasies (peacekeeping) en post-konflik vredeskonsolidasie
(post-conflict peacebuilding).
Die Sekretaris-Generaal het post-konflik vredeskonsolidasie omskryf as die "vestiging van
sosio-ekonomiese samewerking met die oogmerk om die sosiale, politieke en ekonomiese infrastruktuur
te ontwikkel ten einde hernude konflik te voorkom en ter grondlegging van langdurige
vrede".
Met spesifieke verwysing na die korrelasie tussen landmyne en post-konflik vredeskonsolidasie
het die Sekretaris-Generaal benadruk dat landmyne 'n bedreiging inhou vir die konsolidasie van
vrede na burgeroorlog en interne konflik, en veral binne die raamwerk van 'n VN vredesoperasie
in terme van 'n VN Veiligheidsraad mandaat.
Die VN se vredesrol in Mosambiek word allerweë beskou as een van die mees suksesvolle
VN vredesoperasies ooit. Die doel van die studie is gevolglik om ondersoek in te stel na die
toepassing van die konsep van post-konflik vredeskonsolidasie met spesifieke verwysing na
die Mosambiekse vredesproses en die rol van die Verenigde Nasies se Operasie in Mosambiek
(ONUMOZ). In die opsig fokus die studie spesifiek op die rol van ONUMOZ (1992-1995) en
suksesse en tekortkomings in sy vredesmandaat ten opsigte van die implementering van aksies
om die kort-en-langtermyn impak van landmyne in terme van post-konflik vredeskonsolidasie
in Mosambiek aan te spreek.
Vanuit hierdie konteks, vertolk die studie die Landmyn Verdrag (1999) en die totale verbod op
die aanwending, opgaar, produksie en oordrag van landmyne en die vernietiging daarvan as die
mees geskikte raamwerk waarbinne Mosambiek 'n inheemse vermoë tot stand kan bring ten
einde die langtermyn impak van landmyne op post-konflik vredeskonsolidasie effektief aan te
spreek.
Vanuit 'n metodologiese oogpunt word in hierdie studie histories analities te werk gegaan en
die benadering is beskrywend - verklarend van aard. Verder is die metode van ondersoek in
wese deduktief van aard.
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