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Governmental illegitimacy in international law: An emerging norm in theoretical perspective

Posted on:1997-03-30Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of California, BerkeleyCandidate:Roth, Brad RFull Text:PDF
GTID:1466390014982810Subject:Political science
Abstract/Summary:
When is a de facto authority not entitled to be considered a "government" for the purposes of international law? International reaction to the 1991-94 Haitian crisis is only the latest of a series of events that suggest that a norm of governmental illegitimacy is emerging to challenge more traditional notions of state sovereignty. This challenge has dramatic implications for two fundamental legal strictures: that against the use or threat of force against a state's political independence (U.N. Charter, Art. 2(4)), and that against interference in matters "essentially" within a state's domestic jurisdiction (Art. 2(7)). Yet although human rights advocates have begun to speak of state sovereignty as an "anachronism," with some expansively proclaiming the emergence of an international "right to democratic governance," the international law literature lacks systematic treatment of governmental illegitimacy.; This dissertation seeks to specify the international law of collective non-recognition of governments, so as to enable legal evaluation of cases in which competing factions assert governmental authority. It subjects the recognition controversies of the United Nations era to a systematic examination, informed by theoretical and comparative perspectives on governmental legitimacy.; The inquiry establishes that the category of "illegitimate government" now occupies a place in international law, with significant consequences for the legality of intervention in certain instances. The principle of popular sovereignty, hitherto vague and ambiguous, has acquired sufficient determinacy to serve, in limited range of circumstances, as a basis for denial of legal recognition to putative governments. This development does not imply, however, the emergence in international law of a meaningful norm of "democratic governance," nor would such a norm serve the purposes of the scheme of sovereign equality of states embodied in the United Nations Charter.
Keywords/Search Tags:International law, Norm, Governmental illegitimacy
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