ISBN:
9781509914241
,
9781509914227
,
1509914250
,
1509914226
,
1509914234
,
9781509914234
Language:
English
Pages:
1 Online-Ressource (xxviii, 218 pages)
,
Illustrationen
Edition:
First edition
Parallel Title:
Erscheint auch als Wählisch, Martin, 1982 - Peacemaking, power-sharing and international law
Keywords:
International human rights
;
Pacific settlement of international disputes
;
Mediation, International
;
Humanitarian law
;
Peace
;
Konflikt
;
Auswirkung
;
Internationales Recht
;
Menschenrecht
;
Friedenssichernde Maßnahme
;
Friede
;
Friedensvertrag
;
Machtstruktur
;
Ethnische Gruppe
;
Bevölkerungsgruppe
;
Religiöse Identität
;
International law
;
Bosnien-Herzegowina
;
Libanon
;
Electronic books
;
Electronic books
;
Völkerrecht
;
Friedensrecht
;
Menschenrecht
Abstract:
"This monograph provides a contemporary analysis of the frictions between peacemaking and international human rights law based on the cases of post-conflict power-sharing in Lebanon and Bosnia-Herzegovina. In this context it evaluates the long-standing debate in the United Nations and human rights bodies about the 'imperfect peace'. Written from a practitioner-scholarly viewpoint and drawing from new authentic sources, the book describes the mechanisms used in peace agreements and post-conflict constitutions for managing ethnic or religious diversity, explains their legal limits under international human rights law, and provides a conceptual framework for analysing the nexus between law and peacemaking. The book argues that the relationship between the content of peace agreements and post-conflict constitutions, their negotiation process and the element of time need to be untangled to better understand legal limits of statebuilding in the aftermath of armed conflict. It reaches out equally to scholars in human rights law and peace and conflict studies, advisers in peace processes, constitution-makers, and peace mediators.Lasting peace requires the respect for universal human rights. This book offers unique insights into how to find the balance between practical political solutions and the respect for international law. It is a rich resource for peacemakers and conflict parties, and an indispensable read on the phenomenon of the "imperfect peace".Jan Eliasson, Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations, former Swedish Minister for Foreign AffairsA balanced examination of a key issue for mediators and international lawyers alike, the tension between human rights concerns and practical peacemaking. Waehlisch writes with the authority of one who is both an academic but also a political adviser with plentiful hands on experience in the regions from which he draws his case studies, the Balkans and the Arab world.Sir Derek Plumbly KCMG, King's College London, former UN Special Coordinator for LebanonA rigorous reflection on the tension between peacemaking and the protection of human rights. The focus on two well-chosen case-studies brings the problem to life, and international law is presented in the light of deeply understood practical experience. This illuminating, thought-provoking work deserves to be read by everyone involved in the law, practice or study of peacemaking, statebuilding, or human rights.Professor David Feldman, Cambridge University, former ...
Abstract:
1. Introduction I. State Transitions, Power-Sharing and International Law -- II. Closing the Gap -- III. Methodology and Scope -- 2. Power-Sharing in Theory and Practice: Concepts, Mechanisms and Legal Challenges -- I. Ethnic and Religious Diversity as a Challenge for International Law -- II. Democracy Theory and the Perspective of Conflict Resolution III. Mechanisms -- IV. The Legal Debate -- V. Conclusion: The Necessity and Challenges of Bridging Interdisciplinary Perspectives -- 3. Power-Sharing on Trial: Sejdic and Finci v Bosnia and Herzegovina -- I. Bosnia and Herzegovina between Transition and Transformation II. Relevant Decisions of Bosnia and Herzegovina's Constitutional Court (1997́€"2009) -- III. ECtHR Definition of Ethnic-Racial Discrimination in Sejdic and Finci -- IV. Justifying Human Rights Restrictions -- V. Post-trial Developments and Constitutional Reform Process -- VI. Conclusion -- 4. Through the Lens of Human Rights Committees: Lebanese Political Confessionalism and Transitional Mechanism -- I. State Stability, Sectarian Traditions and Socio-Political Change -- II. Reports Submitted by Lebanon to the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination -- III. Debate in the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination -- IV. Analysis: Confessionalism and Non-Discrimination -- V. Transitional Power-Sharing, Unity Governments, Proportions of High-Level Posts and the Right to Participation -- VI. Proportionality and Time Limitations -- VII. Conclusion -- 5. On the Law of Peace: Parameters, Challenges and Limits -- I. The Quest for Absolute Limitations in Peacemaking -- II. Peremptory Norms and Peacemaking -- III. A Conceptual Model for Reflections about the Law of Peace Debate -- IV. Open Questions and Future Research Agenda -- V. Concluding Remarks
Note:
Abstract freely available; full-text restricted to individual document purchasers
,
Includes bibliographical references (pages 187-201) and index
DOI:
10.5040/9781509914241
Permalink