Sovereignty conflicts and International law and politics : a distributive justice issue / Jorge E. Nuñez.
2017
KZ4041 .N86 2017 (Map It)
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Details
Title
Sovereignty conflicts and International law and politics : a distributive justice issue / Jorge E. Nuñez.
Published
Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2017.
Call Number
KZ4041 .N86 2017
ISBN
9781138636842 (hbk.)
1138636843 (hbk.)
9781315205694 (ebk)
1315205696
1138636843 (hbk.)
9781315205694 (ebk)
1315205696
Description
xii, 185 pages ; 25 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)966314859
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Record Appears in
Table of Contents
Preface
xi
PART I
1
1.
Sovereignty conflicts as a distributive justice dilemma
3
Introduction
3
General structure
5
Simplifying assumptions: Sovereignty conflicts of various natures
6
Rawlsian methodology
8
Conclusion
13
Bibliography
14
2.
Limited sovereignty
16
Introduction
16
concept of "sovereignty"
16
Aim of the historical account
23
ancient world
24
Middle Ages
26
modern age
28
Contemporary age
32
Current views on legal and political sovereignty
33
Conclusion
38
Bibliography
39
PART II
43
3.
What should "shared sovereignty" mean?
45
Introduction
45
Previous uses of the terminology
45
meaning of "shared sovereignty" in this book
52
Conclusion
56
Bibliography
56
4.
How far can sovereign states cooperate together and limit their freedom without sacrificing their sovereignty?
58
Introduction
58
Hohfeldian Take On Sovereignty
59
From the smallest to the largest societal organization
62
Self-ownership, sovereignty, and different types of constraints
66
Sovereignty: Supreme authority and limitations
74
Conclusion
76
Bibliography
77
5.
Why is shared sovereignty desirable?
79
Introduction
79
Possible solutions in sovereignty conflicts
79
Unilateral solutions
80
Fortress
80
Integration and free association
81
Independence
82
Self-determination
85
International--multilateral approaches
87
NATO based multilateral security approach
88
United Nations trusteeship
89
Is the Antarctic Treaty a possible model?
90
Could one appeal to the International Court of Justice?
90
Bilateral approaches
91
Condominium
91
Leaseback with guarantees
92
Sovereignty Freeze
93
Abandonment
93
Titular Sovereignty and autonomy
94
status quo
94
Conclusion
95
Bibliography
95
PART III
97
6.
How can shared sovereignty be just?
99
Introduction
99
Setting the stage for the negotiations
100
Formal constraints: A "colorable claim"
102
Alternatives for the negotiators: Principles for the allocation of sovereignty
108
Original position
110
Introducing the "veil of ignorance"
110
Adapting the "veil of ignorance" to sovereignty conflicts: Rationality of the parties and their representatives
111
Reasons leading to the principles of justice: The rule of maximin
113
negotiations: Choosing a principle to allocate sovereignty
116
Why "just acquisition" cannot work
117
"best interest of the child" principle
120
difference principle
122
equality or "equal shares" principle
125
Preliminary requirements for a fair distribution
128
"egalitarian shared sovereignty"
129
Conclusion
137
Bibliography
137
7.
How could shared sovereignty work in practice?
139
Introduction
139
Delimiting the range of application
139
"egalitarian shared sovereignty" applied to actual cases
141
Population
141
Numbers
143
Ethnicity
143
Language
144
Religion
145
Territory
148
Extension
149
Borders
150
Defense
150
Natural resources
152
Government
156
Autarchy and financial system
157
Government: To "share in" and to "share out" sovereignty
159
Division of powers: To "share in" sovereignty
160
Two legal systems and one territory: To "share out" sovereignty
162
Derogation
164
Coordination
165
Principles to solve conflicts of law applicable in coordination of legal systems
166
Approaches in conflicts of law within a sovereign dispute
168
Better and best law
171
egalitarian shared sovereignty applied to government and law
173
Conclusion
175
Bibliography
175
8.
Conclusive remarks, implications, and limitations
177
Bibliography
179
Index
180