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Revisiting The Concept Of Defence In The Jus Ad Bellum The Dual Face Of Defence Johanna Friman

  • SKU: BELL-50226316
Revisiting The Concept Of Defence In The Jus Ad Bellum The Dual Face Of Defence Johanna Friman
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Revisiting The Concept Of Defence In The Jus Ad Bellum The Dual Face Of Defence Johanna Friman instant download after payment.

Publisher: Hart Publishing
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.54 MB
Author: Johanna Friman
ISBN: 9781509906970, 9781509906987, 1509906975, 1509906983
Language: English
Year: 2017

Product desciption

Revisiting The Concept Of Defence In The Jus Ad Bellum The Dual Face Of Defence Johanna Friman by Johanna Friman 9781509906970, 9781509906987, 1509906975, 1509906983 instant download after payment.

The purpose of the jus ad bellum is to draw a line in the sand: thus far, but no further. In the light of modern warfare, a state should today have an explicitly recognised and undisputed right of delimited unilateral defence not only in response to an occurring armed attack, but also in interception of an inevitable or imminent armed attack. This book, however, makes it evident that unilateral interception is not incontestably compatible with the modern right of self-defence in Article 51 of the UN Charter. Then again, unilateral defence need not forever be confi ned to self-defence only, wherefore the book proposes that the concept of defence may best be modernised by a clear legal division into responsive and interceptive defence. Since both threat and use of force are explicitly prohibited in Article 2(4) of the UN Charter, this book further recommends that both responsive and interceptive defence should be explicitly excepted from this prohibition in Article 51 of the UN Charter. The modern jus ad bellum should thus legally recognise a dual face of defence: responsive self-defence if an armed attack occurs, and interceptive necessity-defence if a grave and urgent threat of an armed attack occurs. For without a clarifying and modernising revision, the concept of defence will become irreparably blurred until it is completely dissolved into the ever-shifting sands of war.
Volume 66 in the series Studies in International Law

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