This Article challenges the traditional view of disarmament law that States must directly consent to disarmament measures. In particular, this Article focuses on the ways the Security Council can impose disarmament obligations through its Chapter VII arms embargoes that require all States to restrict target States’ access to weapons and through its Chapter VII authorizations of robust peacekeeping activities that involve the forcible removal of arms from hostile elements within a State. Peacekeeping activities in Somalia, the DRC, and Sierra Leone are prime examples. Such coercive measures call for a reassessment of the foundation of this branch of international law.link_to_subscribed_fulltex
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This article explains how firearms regulation became part of the United Nations’s human rights agend...
The article discusses peacekeeping in Africa, primarily, though not exclusively, of the United Natio...
The Article starts by investigating the manner in which the prohibition to use force is being increm...
U.N. peacekeeping operations have traditionally been expected to adhere to three key principles: the...
This article examines the evolution of international humanitarian law, specifically as it relates to...
It is generally considered that the UN Security Council has been galvanised since the end of the Col...
Due to the political aspects of international law and the political nature of the problems involved ...
In the past few decades, we are facing a rise of non-state actors around the globe, which challenges...
This article concludes that the United Nations is bound by the rules of customary international huma...
Since the end of Cold War there has been an increase in the number internal conflicts and with it a ...
This essay describes tensions that arise between two types of public goods enshrined in the United N...
The Berlin Conference on Libya in January 2020 was held to support United Nations (UN) conflict-reso...
That breaches of military discipline occur during some peacekeeping operations can hardly be doubted...
When the United Nations (UN) Charter was adopted, it was generally considered to have outlawed war. ...
The protection of civilians at risk in armed conflict has, since the late 1990s, become institutiona...
This article explains how firearms regulation became part of the United Nations’s human rights agend...
The article discusses peacekeeping in Africa, primarily, though not exclusively, of the United Natio...
The Article starts by investigating the manner in which the prohibition to use force is being increm...