Description

Book Synopsis
This thought-provoking book addresses the legal questions raised by the nexus between the rule of law and areas of limited statehood, in which the State lacks the ability to exercise the full depth of its governmental authority. Working from an international law perspective, it examines the implications of limited statehood for the traditional State-based framing of the international legal order.

Featuring original contributions written by renowned international scholars, chapters investigate key issues arising at the junction between domestic and international rule of law and areas of limited statehood, as well as the alternative modes of governance that develop therein, both with and without the approval of the State. Contributors discuss the impact of contested sovereignty on the rule of law, international responsibility with regard to rebel governance in these areas, and the consequences of limited statehood for international peace and security.

This book will be useful for students and scholars of international law and international relations, particularly those working on sovereignty and statehood, non-state actors, State responsibility, and the rule of law. It will also appeal to practitioners and policy-makers working in these same fields in either State or global governance apparatus.



Trade Review
’International law presumes a set of territorially-defined sovereign states, but in many parts of the world, state control of territory is more fiction than fact. This path-breaking volume considers a whole host of questions about governance in places where the state’s writ does not run. International law will need fresh thinking if it is ever to affect the behavior of the rebels, gangs and unrecognized governments who actually govern beyond the state, and there is no better place to start than this book.’ -- - Tom Ginsburg, University of Chicago, US

Table of Contents
Contents: PART I INTRODUCTION 1 Rule of law and areas of limited statehood: introduction and perspective 2 Linda Hamid and Jan Wouters 2 Thinking about areas of limited statehood and the rule of law 23 Amichai Magen and Zachariah Parcels PART II CONTESTED SOVEREIGNTY IN AREAS OF LIMITED STATEHOOD AND THE INTERNATIONAL RULE OF LAW 3 De facto regimes in areas of limited statehood and the international rule of law 47 Linda Hamid and Jan Wouters 4 Lessons from the (un)rule of law in Crimea 73 Olga Burlyuk 5 Limited statehood and the rule of law: East Jerusalem’s education system as a case study 96 Yaël Ronen PART III REBEL GOVERNANCE IN AREAS OF LIMITED STATEHOOD AND INTERNATIONAL RESPONSIBILITY 6 Rebel justice? Rule of law and law enforcement by non-state armed groups 119 Benedetta Berti 7 Rebel governors in areas of limited statehood: State responsibility and ‘agents of necessity’ 137 Tatyana Eatwell 8 Responsibility of non-state rulers in areas of limited statehood 162 Nicholas Tsagourias PART IV AREAS OF LIMITED STATEHOOD AND THE MAINTENANCE OF INTERNATIONAL PEACE AND SECURITY 9 Extraterritorial law enforcement in areas of limited statehood: the transnational dimension of the rule of law 184 Pia Hesse 10 Towards a rule of law-based global strategy for countering international terrorism in areas of limited statehood 206 Jessica Almqvist 11 Atrocity prevention in areas of limited statehood: legal and political dilemmas 233 Kenneth Chan Index 260

Rule of Law and Areas of Limited Statehood:

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    A Hardback by Linda Hamid, Jan Wouters

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      View other formats and editions of Rule of Law and Areas of Limited Statehood: by Linda Hamid

      Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd
      Publication Date: 15/01/2021
      ISBN13: 9781788979030, 978-1788979030
      ISBN10: 1788979036

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This thought-provoking book addresses the legal questions raised by the nexus between the rule of law and areas of limited statehood, in which the State lacks the ability to exercise the full depth of its governmental authority. Working from an international law perspective, it examines the implications of limited statehood for the traditional State-based framing of the international legal order.

      Featuring original contributions written by renowned international scholars, chapters investigate key issues arising at the junction between domestic and international rule of law and areas of limited statehood, as well as the alternative modes of governance that develop therein, both with and without the approval of the State. Contributors discuss the impact of contested sovereignty on the rule of law, international responsibility with regard to rebel governance in these areas, and the consequences of limited statehood for international peace and security.

      This book will be useful for students and scholars of international law and international relations, particularly those working on sovereignty and statehood, non-state actors, State responsibility, and the rule of law. It will also appeal to practitioners and policy-makers working in these same fields in either State or global governance apparatus.



      Trade Review
      ’International law presumes a set of territorially-defined sovereign states, but in many parts of the world, state control of territory is more fiction than fact. This path-breaking volume considers a whole host of questions about governance in places where the state’s writ does not run. International law will need fresh thinking if it is ever to affect the behavior of the rebels, gangs and unrecognized governments who actually govern beyond the state, and there is no better place to start than this book.’ -- - Tom Ginsburg, University of Chicago, US

      Table of Contents
      Contents: PART I INTRODUCTION 1 Rule of law and areas of limited statehood: introduction and perspective 2 Linda Hamid and Jan Wouters 2 Thinking about areas of limited statehood and the rule of law 23 Amichai Magen and Zachariah Parcels PART II CONTESTED SOVEREIGNTY IN AREAS OF LIMITED STATEHOOD AND THE INTERNATIONAL RULE OF LAW 3 De facto regimes in areas of limited statehood and the international rule of law 47 Linda Hamid and Jan Wouters 4 Lessons from the (un)rule of law in Crimea 73 Olga Burlyuk 5 Limited statehood and the rule of law: East Jerusalem’s education system as a case study 96 Yaël Ronen PART III REBEL GOVERNANCE IN AREAS OF LIMITED STATEHOOD AND INTERNATIONAL RESPONSIBILITY 6 Rebel justice? Rule of law and law enforcement by non-state armed groups 119 Benedetta Berti 7 Rebel governors in areas of limited statehood: State responsibility and ‘agents of necessity’ 137 Tatyana Eatwell 8 Responsibility of non-state rulers in areas of limited statehood 162 Nicholas Tsagourias PART IV AREAS OF LIMITED STATEHOOD AND THE MAINTENANCE OF INTERNATIONAL PEACE AND SECURITY 9 Extraterritorial law enforcement in areas of limited statehood: the transnational dimension of the rule of law 184 Pia Hesse 10 Towards a rule of law-based global strategy for countering international terrorism in areas of limited statehood 206 Jessica Almqvist 11 Atrocity prevention in areas of limited statehood: legal and political dilemmas 233 Kenneth Chan Index 260

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