There is a strong positive correlation between secession movements that receive international recognition and those that successfully result in independent states. This chapter asks whether the seeming potency of recognition can be justified, or whether there can be nothing said for it, morally speaking. In so doing it critiques and dismisses putative justifications based on the values of democracy, distributive justice, and international stability, before advancing an alternative and more promising possibility: that formal recognition is conducive to the development of ethically valuable politics. This alternative is argued not only to justify the seeming influence that recognition enjoys over attempted secession, but also the liberty to r...
Since the twentieth century, the proliferation of new States has not declined in the twenty first ce...
International system has been witnessing some jeopolitical mobilization after the second half of 20....
This Article argues toward the necessity to develop a new international law framework on secession. ...
There is a strong positive correlation between secession movements that receive international recogn...
The following article examines the interactions between the right of peoples to unilateral non-colon...
There are few questions more interesting and more important for the international community than the...
Secession claims are not sufficiently dealt with at international law. Similarly theoretical analyse...
This work was supported by the Fritz Thyssen Foundation under Grant number Az.20.14.0.032.How much d...
This essay focuses on these conditions that result in the extension of international legitimacy, ask...
The thesis examines two threats to sovereignty: secession and state failure. It focuses on how the s...
The subject matter of the essay—the phenomenon of secession of a part of state territory—is analysed...
The author argues that the problem of recognition of state sovereignty has been neglected in interna...
This book offers a comprehensive summary of extant international law scholarship on the topics of se...
Secession has been noticeably absent from International Relations theory although its role in the cr...
[Summary of the book containing this chapter:] Secession is a detachment of a territory from an exis...
Since the twentieth century, the proliferation of new States has not declined in the twenty first ce...
International system has been witnessing some jeopolitical mobilization after the second half of 20....
This Article argues toward the necessity to develop a new international law framework on secession. ...
There is a strong positive correlation between secession movements that receive international recogn...
The following article examines the interactions between the right of peoples to unilateral non-colon...
There are few questions more interesting and more important for the international community than the...
Secession claims are not sufficiently dealt with at international law. Similarly theoretical analyse...
This work was supported by the Fritz Thyssen Foundation under Grant number Az.20.14.0.032.How much d...
This essay focuses on these conditions that result in the extension of international legitimacy, ask...
The thesis examines two threats to sovereignty: secession and state failure. It focuses on how the s...
The subject matter of the essay—the phenomenon of secession of a part of state territory—is analysed...
The author argues that the problem of recognition of state sovereignty has been neglected in interna...
This book offers a comprehensive summary of extant international law scholarship on the topics of se...
Secession has been noticeably absent from International Relations theory although its role in the cr...
[Summary of the book containing this chapter:] Secession is a detachment of a territory from an exis...
Since the twentieth century, the proliferation of new States has not declined in the twenty first ce...
International system has been witnessing some jeopolitical mobilization after the second half of 20....
This Article argues toward the necessity to develop a new international law framework on secession. ...