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Sovereignty as a legal value
The Cambridge Companion to International Law, 2012, p.117-133
2012

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Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Sovereignty as a legal value
Ist Teil von
  • The Cambridge Companion to International Law, 2012, p.117-133
Ort / Verlag
Cambridge University Press
Erscheinungsjahr
2012
Link zum Volltext
Quelle
Cambridge University Press online books
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • ‘Sovereignty’ as a distinctive attribute of the stateChapter 4 explored the question how it is that various peoples (the Lithuanians, the Thais . . .) have a state of their own; whereas others (the Kurds, the Tibetans . . .) do not. Despite the manifest historical contingencies involved, once statehood is generally recognised – evidenced most obviously by admission to the United Nations – then a new situation arises, a category divide is established, marked by the legal category of statehood. The new state is ‘sovereign’, has ‘sovereignty’; and this is true, no matter how fragile its condition, how diminutive its resources. Vattel (1714–1767), who systematised the pre-1914 law of nations in his treatise of 1758, put it thus: sovereign states are to be considered as so many free persons living together in the state of nature, that is to say, without a common civil law or common institutions; in such a situation they are ‘naturally equal’, and inequality of power does not affect this equality; ‘[a] dwarf is as much a man as a giant; a small republic is no less a sovereign state than the most powerful kingdom’ (Vattel 1758 [2008], Bk. I, Preliminaries, §18). And despite all that has changed since 1758, the basic concept remains: states are ‘political entities equal in law, similar in form . . ., the direct subjects of international law’ (Reparation for Injuries suffered in the Service of the United Nations, ICJ Reports 1949, p. 174, 177–178). As the Badinter Commission, established to advise on legal issues arising from the breakup of the former Yugoslavia, put it, ‘such a state is characterised by sovereignty’ (Opinion No. 1 (1991), 92 ILR 165).
Sprache
Englisch
Identifikatoren
ISBN: 0521190886, 9780521143080, 052114308X, 9780521190886
DOI: 10.1017/CCO9781139035651.009
Titel-ID: cdi_cambridge_corebooks_9781139035651_xml_CCO9781139035651A015
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