In her speech at the Munich Security Conference in February 2015, Chancellor Angela Merkel unwaveringly said: “Europe’s borders are and will remain unalterable.” At the same time, however, most observers agree that Crimea will remain de facto under Russian control. Against this backdrop the article assesses the contemporary and possible future legal status of Crimea. Particular attention is given to the inseparability of the link between Russia’s unlawful use of force and the purported territorial status alteration of Crimea, the concept of remedial secession and Crimea’s current status as an occupied territory
The article is intended to give a reader a broader view of the post-Crimean academic discussion with...
In March 2015, the Polish Academy of Science, the Institute of Law Studies, and the Centre for Polis...
Following Russian intervention and a referendum held on 16th March 2014, the Ukrainian republic of C...
In her speech at the Munich Security Conference in February 2015, Chancellor Angela Merkel unwaverin...
In February and March 2014, Ukraine was literally overrun by a chain of events that eventually led t...
The Crimean situation has put self-determination, secession and accession back at the top of the int...
n this Policy Brief, Amanda Paul and Marta Zakrzewska provide a comprehensive account of the situati...
On 18 March 2014, the Lower House of the Russian Parliament approved a Treaty to annex the Ukrainian...
Russia’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea in March 2014 sparked so far unrealised international fears ...
A key balance between two of the most fundamental principles of the post-World War II international ...
The annexation of Crimea is not an ordinary event in contemporary international relations. Since WWI...
In the spring of 2014, the world was kept on its toes with the daily news coming from Ukraine. Russi...
International audienceThe secession and de facto annexation of Crimea by Russia in March 2014 and th...
Russia's annexation of Crimea in early 2014 dominated the headlines and caused heated debates among ...
Crimea and the City of Sevastopol justifiably separated from Ukraine and reunified with the Russian ...
The article is intended to give a reader a broader view of the post-Crimean academic discussion with...
In March 2015, the Polish Academy of Science, the Institute of Law Studies, and the Centre for Polis...
Following Russian intervention and a referendum held on 16th March 2014, the Ukrainian republic of C...
In her speech at the Munich Security Conference in February 2015, Chancellor Angela Merkel unwaverin...
In February and March 2014, Ukraine was literally overrun by a chain of events that eventually led t...
The Crimean situation has put self-determination, secession and accession back at the top of the int...
n this Policy Brief, Amanda Paul and Marta Zakrzewska provide a comprehensive account of the situati...
On 18 March 2014, the Lower House of the Russian Parliament approved a Treaty to annex the Ukrainian...
Russia’s annexation of Ukraine’s Crimea in March 2014 sparked so far unrealised international fears ...
A key balance between two of the most fundamental principles of the post-World War II international ...
The annexation of Crimea is not an ordinary event in contemporary international relations. Since WWI...
In the spring of 2014, the world was kept on its toes with the daily news coming from Ukraine. Russi...
International audienceThe secession and de facto annexation of Crimea by Russia in March 2014 and th...
Russia's annexation of Crimea in early 2014 dominated the headlines and caused heated debates among ...
Crimea and the City of Sevastopol justifiably separated from Ukraine and reunified with the Russian ...
The article is intended to give a reader a broader view of the post-Crimean academic discussion with...
In March 2015, the Polish Academy of Science, the Institute of Law Studies, and the Centre for Polis...
Following Russian intervention and a referendum held on 16th March 2014, the Ukrainian republic of C...