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Humanitarian Occupation Gregory H . Fox (Wayne State University)

Humanitarian Occupation By Gregory H . Fox (Wayne State University)

Humanitarian Occupation by Gregory H . Fox (Wayne State University)


Summary

This book analyzes the new phenomenon of international organizations assuming the powers of a national government in order to reform political institutions. After reviewing the history of internationalized territories, this book examines why these 'humanitarian occupations' occurred and whether they were legally justified.

Humanitarian Occupation Summary

Humanitarian Occupation by Gregory H . Fox (Wayne State University)

This book analyzes a new phenomenon in international law: international organizations assuming the powers of a national government in order to reform political institutions. After reviewing the history of internationalized territories, this book asks two questions about these 'humanitarian occupations'. First, why did they occur? The book argues that the missions were part of a larger trend in international law to maintain existing states and their populations. The only way this could occur in these territories, which had all seen violent internal conflict, was for international administrators to take charge. Second, what is the legal justification for the missions? The book examines each of the existing justifications and finds them wanting. A new foundation is needed, one that takes account of the missions' authorisation by the UN Security Council and their pursuit of goals widely supported in the international community.

Humanitarian Occupation Reviews

' Fox's well organised, thorough and able analysis departs from two questions directrices: why, by endowing international organisations with governing authority over a state, take the 'remarkable step of effectively inverting accepted notions of state sovereignty' and what the legal basis for such an enterprise would be, taking into account that HO 'inevitably sits uneasily with traditional legal categories'. the concluding reflections of this timely and recommendable book provide an original and thought-provoking exercise in view of an international law regime constantly in flux.' The Yale Journal of International Law
'Without doubt, the many questions raised in [this book] should be addressed by the relevant international actors when creating new nation building missions.' NATO Legal Gazette
' a revolutionary response to the relation between freedom and authority ' The Journal of ICLQ

About Gregory H . Fox (Wayne State University)

Gregory H. Fox is Associate Professor of Law (tenured) at Wayne State University Law School, where he is the Inaugural Cohn Family Scholar in Legal History.

Table of Contents

Introduction; Part I. Historical Antecedents: 1. The historical origins of humanitarian occupation I - Governance in Service of Outsiders; 2. Historical origins of humanitarian occupation II - internationalised territory in the service of insiders; 3. Full international governance; Part II. Why Humanitarian Occupation?: 4. Rejected models of statehood; 5. Constructing the liberal state; Part III. Legal Justifications: 6. Conventional legal justifications; 7. The international law of occupation; 8. Reforming the law: the security council as legislator; 9. Conclusion.

Additional information

NPB9780521856003
9780521856003
0521856000
Humanitarian Occupation by Gregory H . Fox (Wayne State University)
New
Hardback
Cambridge University Press
2008-02-21
336
N/A
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