Whereas the OAU sanctifi ed state rights in the name of sovereignty, the AU is built on the modern idea of sovereignty as state responsibility, expressed in the international principle of responsibility to protect (R2P). Against the backdrop of the evolution of the notion of sovereignty in the world at large and in Africa in particular, the article focuses on the elements of R2P built into the structures and processes of the AU. Thereafter the regional body’s actual record in giving effect to R2P is assessed. The AU can claim some successes, as with peacekeeping ventures in Africa, but it also faces serious challenges in living up to the precepts of R2P and, by implication, its own Constitutive Act
Sovereignty, according to the authors, can no longer be seen as a protection against interference, b...
The Responsibility to Protect is a new human security paradigm that re-conceptualizes state soverei...
In 2005, governments around the world unanimously agreed to the principle of the responsibility to p...
The thesis focuses on, and tries to evaluate, the role that the African Union (AU) plays in protecti...
The thesis focuses on, and tries to evaluate, the role that the African Union (AU) plays in protecti...
Despite its many institutional and political weaknesses and limitations, the African Union (AU) has ...
The thesis focuses on, and tries to evaluate, the role that the African Union (AU) plays in protecti...
A Thesis Submitted To The School Of Humanities And Social Sciences In Partial Fulfillment Of The Req...
This article examines the role that groups played in the rise of Responsibility to Protect (R2P) wit...
This paper inquires which role the concepts and norms human security and, more particular, the princ...
The doctrine Responsibility to Protect (R2P) stems from the idea that there are two opposing notions...
Responsibility to Protect (RtoP or R2P), a term coined in 2001, remains one of the central concepts ...
At the 2005 World Summit, an important normative shift occurred in the definition of sovereignty as ...
The principle of state sovereignty is the cornerstone upon which international law has traditionally...
At the 2005 World Summit, an important normative shift occurred in the definition of sovereignty as ...
Sovereignty, according to the authors, can no longer be seen as a protection against interference, b...
The Responsibility to Protect is a new human security paradigm that re-conceptualizes state soverei...
In 2005, governments around the world unanimously agreed to the principle of the responsibility to p...
The thesis focuses on, and tries to evaluate, the role that the African Union (AU) plays in protecti...
The thesis focuses on, and tries to evaluate, the role that the African Union (AU) plays in protecti...
Despite its many institutional and political weaknesses and limitations, the African Union (AU) has ...
The thesis focuses on, and tries to evaluate, the role that the African Union (AU) plays in protecti...
A Thesis Submitted To The School Of Humanities And Social Sciences In Partial Fulfillment Of The Req...
This article examines the role that groups played in the rise of Responsibility to Protect (R2P) wit...
This paper inquires which role the concepts and norms human security and, more particular, the princ...
The doctrine Responsibility to Protect (R2P) stems from the idea that there are two opposing notions...
Responsibility to Protect (RtoP or R2P), a term coined in 2001, remains one of the central concepts ...
At the 2005 World Summit, an important normative shift occurred in the definition of sovereignty as ...
The principle of state sovereignty is the cornerstone upon which international law has traditionally...
At the 2005 World Summit, an important normative shift occurred in the definition of sovereignty as ...
Sovereignty, according to the authors, can no longer be seen as a protection against interference, b...
The Responsibility to Protect is a new human security paradigm that re-conceptualizes state soverei...
In 2005, governments around the world unanimously agreed to the principle of the responsibility to p...