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Disobeying the Security Council

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Disobeying the Security Council Synopsis

This book examines how the United Nations Security Council, in exercising its power to impose binding non-forcible measures ('sanctions') under Article 41 of the UN Charter, may violate international law. The Council may overstep limits on its power imposed by the UN Charter itself and by general international law, including human rights guarentees. Such acts may engage the international responsibility of the United Nations, the organization of which the Security Council is an organ. Disobeying the Security Council discusses how and by whom the responsibility of the UN for unlawful Security Council sanctions can be determined; in other words, how the UN can be held to account for Security Council excesses. The central thesis of this work is that states can respond to unlawful sanctions imposed by the Security Council, in a decentralized manner, by disobeying the Security Council's command. In international law, this disobedience can be justified as constituting a countermeasure to the Security Council's unlawful act. Recent practice of states, both in the form of executive acts and court decisions, demonstrates an increasing tendency to disobey sanctions that are perceived as unlawful. After discussing other possible qualifications of disobedience under international law, the book concludes that this practice can (and should) be qualified as a countermeasure.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780199670734
Publication date: 14th February 2013
Author: Antonios (Lecturer in Law, University College London) Tzanakopoulos
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 298 pages
Series: Oxford Monographs in International Law
Genres: Public international law: responsibility of states and other entities
International institutions
Public international law: international organizations and institutions
Public international law: human rights