Fr. 90.00

Secession and State Creation - What Everyone Needs to Know (R)

English · Hardback

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Description

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This short guide to the timely topic of state creation and secession illuminates the legal, poltical, and practical matters of secession and state creation on a global scale.

List of contents










  • Introduction

  • Chapter 1: Statehood and Secession in International Politics

  • Chapter 2: Historical Approaches to State Creation and Secession

  • Chapter 3: State Creation and Secession since Decolonisation

  • Chapter 4: Independence and the Institutions of Statehood

  • Chapter 5: Joining the International Community

  • Appendix A: Growth of UN Membership, 1945-

  • Appendix B: UN General Assembly Resolution 1514 (XV), 1960

  • Recommended Reading

  • Index



About the author

James Ker-Lindsay is Eurobank Senior Research Fellow on the Politics of South East Europe at the European Institute, London School of Economics and Political Science.
Mikulas Fabry is Associate Professor in the Sam Nunn School of International Affairs at the Georgia Institute of Technology.

Summary

What makes a state? This question has attracted more and more attention in recent years with Catalan's illegal vote for independence from Spain and Palestine's ongoing search for international recognition. And while Scotland chose to remain with the United Kingdom, discussions of independence have only continued as the ramifications of the later Brexit vote begin to set in.

As James Ker-Lindsay and Mikulas Fabry show in this new addition to the What Everyone Needs to Know® series, the road to statehood does not run smooth. Declaring independence is only the first step; gaining both local and global acceptance is necessary before a state can become truly independent. The prospect of losing territory is usually not welcomed by the parent state, and any such threat to an existing culture and its economy is often met with resistance--armed or otherwise. Beyond this immediate conflict, the international community often refuses to accept new states without proof of defined territory, a settled population, and effective government, which frequently translates to a democratic one with demonstrated respect for human rights. Covering the legal, political, and practical issues of secession and state creation, Ker-Lindsay and Fabry provide an essential guide to this timely topic.

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