Bibliographic Information

Collective security : theory, law and practice

Nicholas Tsagourias and Nigel D. White

Cambridge University Press, 2015, c2013

  • : pbk

Available at  / 4 libraries

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Note

"First published 2013, first paperback edition 2015"--T.p. verso

Bibliography: p. 422-461

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This analysis of collective security covers its institutional, operational and legal parameters along with the United Nations system, presenting it as a global public order institution for maintaining peace. The authors study its constitutional premises as they are shaped by the forces of law and politics. After an historical account of initiatives and projects for global peace, the authors explain the morphology of collective security as a global public order institution and outline its triggers, institutions, actors, components and tools. They go on to analyse its legal properties and the processes of political, legal and criminal accountability. The analysis and assessment are informed throughout by practice drawn from examples including Korea, Iraq and Libya, and by a wealth of cases from national and international jurisdictions.

Table of Contents

  • Part I. The Concept of Collective Security: 1. Collective security: a historical journey
  • 2. The morphology of collective security
  • 3. Triggers, actors and institutions
  • Part II. Collective Security Components: 4. States and collective security
  • 5. The United Nations
  • 6. Regional organisations
  • 7. Private military and security companies
  • Part III. Collective Security Tools: 8. The settlement of disputes and preventive security
  • 9. State-building
  • 10. Sanctions
  • 11. Military security
  • Part IV. Legal Management of Collective Security: 12. Law as internal facilitator, regulator or constraint
  • 13. Law as external facilitator, regulator or constraint
  • 14. The management of normative conflicts
  • Part V. Accountability in Collective Security: 15. Accountability in collective security
  • 16. International responsibility and liability
  • 17. Individual criminal responsibility
  • 18. Conclusion.

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