Democratic Accountability and the Use of Force in International Law.
tarafından
 
Ku, Charlotte.

Başlık
Democratic Accountability and the Use of Force in International Law.

Yazar
Ku, Charlotte.

ISBN
9781139147422

Yazar Ek Girişi
Ku, Charlotte.

Fiziksel Tanımlama
1 online resource (468 pages)

İçerik
Cover -- Half-title -- Title -- Copyright -- Dedication -- Contents -- Figures -- Tables -- Notes on contributors -- Preface -- Disclaimer -- Abbreviations -- Part I Introduction -- 1 Broaching the issues -- Tenets of democracy: participation in decision-making and accountability -- Using military forces under the auspices of international institutions: from proposals to practices -- The League of Nations -- The United Nations -- The North Atlantic Treaty -- Uses of military forces under international auspices -- Issues of democratic accountability -- International authorization to use military forces -- National authorization to use military forces -- Democratic civilian control of military personnel and operations -- Civilian responsibility to the military for the safety of deployed personnel -- Responsibility to comply with norms governing the conduct of military and other international personnel in the field -- The structure of the study -- The framework for the analyses -- The nine countries -- The outline of the study -- Future prospects -- Part II The domestic and international context -- 2 The interface of national constitutional systems with international law and institutions on using military forces… -- Trends in constitutional control over the use of force in the seventeenth to twentieth centuries -- Collective security and collective self-defense: issues for the United States -- Developments in other countries -- Illustrative conflicts: constitutional issues in multinational military operations -- Constitutional considerations for particular countries -- Conclusion -- 3 Domestic political factors and decisions to use military forces -- Political culture -- Political relationships -- Leadership -- Contending political groups -- Budgetary commitments -- The military -- Societal influences -- Mass media -- Public opinion.
 
Societal groups -- The impact of domestic political considerations by type of peace operation -- International pressures -- Domestic and international politics: changes over time -- 4 Collective security, peacekeeping, and ad hoc multilateralism -- Putting collective security into practice -- The League of Nations: an institutional legacy -- An evolving security role for the United Nations -- Filling security gaps during the Cold War -- Post-Cold War transitions -- Challenges to international peace operations at the end of the twentieth century -- Somalia -- Rwanda -- Bosnia -- Regional security arrangements and ad hoc multilateralism -- NATO and Kosovo -- Regional arrangements -- Conclusion: the United Nations and ad hoc multilateralism -- 5 The legal responsibility of military personnel -- Introduction -- The status of military personnel in UN peace support operations -- UN law: mandate and terms of reference -- Status-of-forces agreements and participation agreements -- The applicability of international humanitarian law to UN peace support operations -- The status of military personnel in NATO peace support operations -- Dutchbat in Srebrenica -- Implementing the mandate -- Witnessing war crimes -- Summary and conclusions -- Part III Traditional contributors to international military operations -- 6 Canada: committed contributor of ideas and forces, but with growing doubts and problems -- Introduction -- Constitutional and legal situation -- Debates about peacekeeping and the use of force -- Traditional peacekeeping -- Monitoring and observation -- Force to ensure compliance with international mandates -- Peacekeeping with state-building -- Enforcement -- Canada's continued commitment to international operations -- Conclusion -- 7 Norway: political consensus and the problem of accountability -- Norwegian involvement abroad.
 
Monitoring and observation -- Traditional peacekeeping -- Peacekeeping plus state-building -- Peacekeeping to ensure compliance with international mandates -- Enforcement -- Nordic cooperation in UN operations -- The uses of military forces and the politics of legality -- Legal constraints on the use of the military -- The UN, NATO, and the question of command -- The UN, NATO, and the question of mandates -- The two constellations of Norwegian foreign policy -- First constellation: sovereignty, security, and the UN -- Second constellation: human rights and humanitarian intervention -- Conclusion -- 8 India: democratic, poor, internationalist -- Why India matters in this study -- India's democratic credentials -- India as a postcolonial developing country -- India's peacekeeping credentials -- International authorization -- Examples -- International authorization and democratic accountability -- The Sierra Leone crisis of May 2000 -- National authorization -- Agencies in the decision-making process -- The decision-making process -- Civil-military relations -- The Indian armed forces -- Democratic accountability domestically -- Formal mechanisms -- Informal controls -- The Sri Lanka crisis of May 2000 -- Conclusion -- Part IV Newcomers to international military operations -- 9 Japan: moderate commitment within legal strictures -- Introduction -- The debate within a historical context -- The Constitution and utilization of military forces -- Article 9 and the current official interpretation -- Different forms of military operations and Japanese participation -- Authorization within the Japanese legal framework -- International authorization and statutory requirements -- National authorization to use the SDF: parliamentary accountability -- Specific issues of accountability in Japan -- Political accountability: bureaucrats vs. politicians.
 
Public accountability: the deliberative role of the Diet -- Civilian accountability: role of the military establishment -- Soldiers' responsibility: compliance with humanitarian norms -- Conclusions -- 10 Germany: ensuring political legitimacy for the use of military forces by requiring constitutional accountability -- Historical introduction -- Political background and constitutional framework for the 1994 judgment -- Political background -- Constitutional framework -- The political and military situation since 1998 -- International authorization to deploy military forces -- Authorization by the UN and NATO -- Conformity of authorization with international law -- National authorization to deploy military forces -- The constitutional and political system -- Deriving the parliamentary authorization requirement -- The specifics of the approval requirement -- Authorizations in practice -- Civilian control -- Historical aspects of civilian control of the military -- Safeguards for the civilian control of the military -- Civilian control of the military acting under international auspices -- Civilian responsibility -- Military responsibility -- The question of democratic accountability: general conclusions -- Part V Permanent members of the UN Security Council -- 11 Russian Federation: the pendulum of powers and accountability -- Introduction -- Historical overview -- Current regulation -- The Constitution -- The Constitutional Court -- The statute -- Official doctrine -- Practice of authorization of foreign deployments -- Concluding remarks -- 12 France: Security Council legitimacy and executive primacy -- Introduction -- Using force internationally: from hesitancy to full participation -- An initial ambiguity -- A growing involvement -- A flexible doctrine -- The unique international legitimacy of the Security Council.
 
French posture in the Security Council -- The unique features of the Security Council -- The domestic dimension: an unfettered executive -- A key international role for the president -- French decision-making in time of crisis -- A limited role for the parliament -- Promoting the European Union as an actor in international military operations -- Conclusion -- 13 The United Kingdom: increasing commitment requires greater parliamentary involvement -- The UK Constitution and military action -- The War Cabinet -- The United Kingdom and UN peace operations -- The United Kingdom and NATO -- The role of parliament -- Peacekeeping -- Enforcement actions to combat aggression -- Situations where force is used to ensure compliance with international mandates -- Concluding remarks -- 14 The United States: democracy, hegemony, and accountability -- The law governing use of force by the United States -- The Constitution -- The War Powers Resolution -- The political dimension -- Party politics -- Public opinion -- Use of military forces under international institutions -- Military force structure, doctrine, and capability -- Requisitioning of forces -- Changing attitudes towards Article 43 agreements -- NATO -- Conclusion -- Part VI Conclusion -- 15 Toward a mixed system of democratic accountability -- The record: steps toward establishing democratic accountability -- International authorization to use military forces -- National authorization to use military forces -- Civilian control, civilian responsibility, military responsibility -- An evolving mixed system -- Constructing a new order for maintaining democratic accountability while using military forces under international auspices -- References -- Index.

Özet
An analysis of the authority of internationally-authorized armed interventions, considering experiences of nine democracies.

Notlar
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

Konu Başlığı
United Nations--Armed Forces.

Tür
Electronic books.

Yazar Ek Girişi
Jacobson, Harold K.

Elektronik Erişim
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LibraryMateryal TürüDemirbaş NumarasıYer NumarasıDurumu/İade Tarihi
IYTE LibraryE-Kitap1182308-1001KZ6376 .D46 2003Ebrary E-Books