書誌事項

Democracy and international law

edited by Gregory H. Fox, Brad R. Roth

(International law, 24)(An Elgar research collection)

Edward Elgar, c2020

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注記

Includes bibliographical references

内容説明・目次

内容説明

At the end of the Cold War, international law scholars engaged in furious debate over whether principles of democratic legitimacy had entered international law. Many argued that a "democratic entitlement" was then emerging. Others were skeptical that international practice in democracy promotion was either consistent or sufficiently widespread and many found the idea of a democratic entitlement dangerous. Those debates, while ongoing, have not been comprehensively revisited in almost twenty years. This research review identifies the leading scholarship of the past two decades on these and other questions. It focuses particular attention on the normative consequences of the recent "democratic recession" in many regions of the world.

目次

Contents: Introduction Gregory H. Fox and Brad R. Roth xii PART I PRESENT OVERALL STATUS OF EMERGING RIGHT TO DEMOCRATIC GOVERNANCE 1. Susan Marks (2011), 'What has Become of the Emerging Right to Democratic Governance?', European Journal of International Law, 22 (2), May, 507-24 2 2. Jean d'Aspremont (2011), 'The Rise and Fall of Democracy Governance in International Law: A Reply to Susan Marks', European Journal of International Law, 22 (2), May, 549-70 20 3. Christian Pippan (2012), 'Democracy as a Global Norm: Has it Finally Emerged?', Matthew Happold (ed.), International Law in a Multipolar World, Chapter 10, Abingdon, UK and New York, NY, USA: Taylor & Francis, 203-23 42 4. Jure Vidmar (2014), 'Judicial Interpretations of Democracy in Human Rights Treaties', Cambridge Journal of International and Comparative Law, 3 (2), 532-55 63 5. Erika de Wet (2015), 'From Free Town to Cairo via Kiev: The Unpredictable Road of Democratic Legitimacy in Governmental Recognition', American Journal of International Law Unbound, 108, 201-7 87 6. Brad R. Roth (2015), 'Whither Democratic Legitimism?: Contextualizing Recent Developments in the Recognition and Non- Recognition of Governments', American Journal of International Law Unbound, 108, 213-18 94 7. Jean d'Aspremont (2015), 'The Pipe Dream of Constraining Recognition Through Democracy: International Lawyers' Regulatory Project Continued', American Journal of International Law Unbound, 108, 219-21 100 8. Christina M. Cerna (2015), 'Democratic Legitimacy and Respect for Human Rights: The New Gold Standard', American Journal of International Law Unbound, 108, 222-7 103 9. Obiora Chinedu Okafor (2015), 'Democratic Legitimacy as a Criterion for the Recognition of Governments: A Response to Professor Erika De Wet', American Journal of International Law Unbound, 108, 228-32 109 10. Vasiliki Saranti (2015), 'Democratic Legitimacy as a Criterion for Recognizing a Government: Towards the Emergence of a Regional Customary Rule in The Americas? A Reply to Professor Erika De Wet', American Journal of International Law Unbound , 108 , 233-8 114 PART II DEMOCRACY AND SELF-DETERMINATION 11. Russell A. Miller (2003), 'Self-Determination in International Law and the Demise of Democracy?', Columbia Journal of Transnational Law , 41 , 601-48 121 12. Niels Petersen (2008), 'The Principle of Democratic Teleology in International Law', Brooklyn Journal of International Law , 34 (1), 33-84 169 13. Brad R. Roth (2018), 'The Relevance of Democratic Principles to the Self-Determination Norm', in Peter Hilpold (ed.), Autonomy and Self-Determination , Chapter 3, Cheltenham, UK and Northampton, MA, USA: Edward Elgar Publishing, 56-76 221 PART III EVALUATING ELECTIONS 14. Christina Binder (2009), 'Two Decades of International Electoral Support: Challenges and Added Value', Max Planck Yearbook of United Nations Law , 13 , 213-46 243 15. Avery Davis-Roberts and David J. Carroll (2010), 'Using International Law to Assess Elections', Democratization , 17 (3), June, 416-41 277 16. Barrie Sander (2019), 'Democracy Under The Influence: Paradigms of State Responsibility for Cyber Influence Operations on Elections', Chinese Journal of International Law , 18 (1), March, 1-56 303 PART IV THE UNITED NATIONS 17. Gregory H. Fox (2004), 'Democratization', in David Malone (ed.), The UN Security Council: From the Cold War to the 21st Century , Chapter 5, Colorado, USA: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 69-84 360 18. Francesco Mancini (2016), 'Promoting Democracy', in Sebastian von Einsiedel, David M. Malone and Bruno Stagno Ugarte (eds), The UN Security Council in the 21st Century , Part II, Chapter 12, Colorado, USA: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 235-57 376 PART V REGIONAL ARRANGEMENTS 19. Agustin Ruiz Robledo (2018), 'The Construction of the Right to Free Elections by the European Court of Human Rights', Cambridge International Law Journal , 7 (2), 225-40 400 20. Enrique Lagos and Timothy D. Rudy (2004), 'In Defense of Democracy', University of Miami Inter-American Law Review, 35 (2), Spring, 283-309 416 21. Thomas Legler and Thomas Kwasi Tieku (2010), 'What Difference Can a Path Make? Regional Democracy Promotion Regimes in the Americas and Africa', Democratization, 17 (3), June, 465-91 443 22. Kalkidan N. Obse and Christian Pippan (2015), 'Collectively Protecting Constitutionalism and Democratic Governance in Africa: A Tale of High Hopes and Low Expectations?', Cambridge Journal of International and Comparative Law, 4 (2), 344-67 470 23. Solomon A. Dersso (2019), 'The Status and Legitimacy of Popular Uprisings in the AU Norms on Democracy and Constitutional Governance', Journal of African Law, 63 (S1), May, 107-30 494 PART VI DEMOCRATIC RECESSION 24. Amichai Magen (2015), 'The Right to Democratic Governance in an Era of Democratic Recession', Cambridge Journal of International and Comparative Law, 4 (2), 368-87 519 25. David Landau (2017), 'Democratic Erosion and Constitution- Making Moments: The Role of International Law', UC Irvine Journal of International, Transnational, and Comparative Law, 2, 87-112 539 PART VII DEMOCRACY AND INTERNAL CRISES 26. Jacob Wobig (2015), 'Defending Democracy with International Law: Preventing Coup Attempts with Democracy Clauses', Democratization, 22 (4), 631-54 566 27. Issaka K. Souare (2014), 'The African Union as a Norm Entrepreneur on Military Coups d'Etat in Africa (1952-2012): An Empirical Assessment', Journal of Modern African Studies, 52 (1), 69-94 590 28. Eki Yemisi Omorogbe (2011), 'A Club of Incumbents? The African Union and Coups d'Etat', Vanderbilt University Journal of Transnational Law, 44 (1), 123-54 616 29. Ozan O. Varol (2012), 'The Democratic Coup d'Etat', Harvard International Law Journal, 53 (2), Summer, 291-356 648 30. Matthew Saul (2012), 'The Search for an International Legal Concept of Democracy: Lessons from the Post-Conflict Reconstruction of Sierra Leone', Melbourne Journal of International Law, 13 (1), 540-68 714 PART VIII DEMOCRACY, INTERVENTION AND PEACE 31. David Wippman (2015), 'Pro-Democratic Intervention', in Marc Weller (ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the Use of Force in International Law, Chapter 36, Oxford, UK and New York, NY, USA: Oxford University Press, 797-815 744 32. Sara McLaughlin Mitchell and Paul F. Diehl (2012), 'Caution in What You Wish For: The Consequences of a Right to Democracy', Stanford Journal of International Law, 48 (2), Summer, 289-317 763 33. Simone van den Driest (2010), '"Pro-Democratic" Intervention and the Right to Political Self-Determination: The Case of Operation Iraqi Freedom', Netherlands International Law Review, 57 (1), March, 29-72 792 34. Jeremy I. Levitt (2006), 'Pro-Democratic Intervention in Africa', Wisconsin International Law Journal, 24 (3), 785-833 836 Index

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