Abstract Recognition in contemporary international law is generally seen as a declaratory act. This is indeed the only plausible explanation in situations where a new State emerges consensually and in the absence of territorial illegality. Unilateral secession and territorial illegality, however, create different legal circumstances in which the applicable rules of international law imply and even presuppose that (collective) recognition could have constitutive effects. This article therefore suggests that the interpretation of the legal nature of recognition and non-recognition should not start on the premise that recognition always merely acknowledges the fact of the emergence of a new State. This is not to say that States cannot exist wi...
Recognition plays a multifaceted role in international theory. In rarely communicating literatures, ...
This article deals with the fundamental evolution that the process of state recognition has gone thr...
The problem of recognition has long troubled American jurists. Jurists have sought to detach the jur...
Abstract Recognition in contemporary international law is generally seen as a declaratory act. This ...
It is the fact that international law itself does not create States by way of some legislative fiat;...
Although recognition of States retains a fundamental importance in international law and is a common...
This chapter explores the collective recognition of states and the role of the international communi...
During the past decade there has been a resurgence of interest in the concept of recognition in inte...
The following study intends to analyse the evolution of theories regarding the recognition of states...
In the law of nations everything depends upon recognition. A newly organized state may possess all t...
The subject of the review was the recognition of States and representing their governments due to th...
Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence from 2008 and certain subsequent developments have c...
The establishment process of new states has not been finished yet. There are still some regions whic...
Recognition is the act whereby the executive of a nation formally acknowledges the existence of a ne...
There is a strong positive correlation between secession movements that receive international recogn...
Recognition plays a multifaceted role in international theory. In rarely communicating literatures, ...
This article deals with the fundamental evolution that the process of state recognition has gone thr...
The problem of recognition has long troubled American jurists. Jurists have sought to detach the jur...
Abstract Recognition in contemporary international law is generally seen as a declaratory act. This ...
It is the fact that international law itself does not create States by way of some legislative fiat;...
Although recognition of States retains a fundamental importance in international law and is a common...
This chapter explores the collective recognition of states and the role of the international communi...
During the past decade there has been a resurgence of interest in the concept of recognition in inte...
The following study intends to analyse the evolution of theories regarding the recognition of states...
In the law of nations everything depends upon recognition. A newly organized state may possess all t...
The subject of the review was the recognition of States and representing their governments due to th...
Kosovo's unilateral declaration of independence from 2008 and certain subsequent developments have c...
The establishment process of new states has not been finished yet. There are still some regions whic...
Recognition is the act whereby the executive of a nation formally acknowledges the existence of a ne...
There is a strong positive correlation between secession movements that receive international recogn...
Recognition plays a multifaceted role in international theory. In rarely communicating literatures, ...
This article deals with the fundamental evolution that the process of state recognition has gone thr...
The problem of recognition has long troubled American jurists. Jurists have sought to detach the jur...