Book contents
- Reviews
- State Renaissance for Peace
- State Renaissance for Peace
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Tables
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Additional material
- Abbreviations
- Introduction Transitional Governance Today
- Part I The Unchartered Territory of Transitional Governance
- 1 The Rise and Internationalisation of Transitional Governance
- 2 Limitations of Existing Literature
- Part II Foundation and Actors of Transitional Governance * Sources of Ius in Interregno
- Part III Self-Determination through Transitional Governance
- Part IV Moderating External Influence on Transitional Governance
- Index
2 - Limitations of Existing Literature
from Part I - The Unchartered Territory of Transitional Governance
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 September 2020
- Reviews
- State Renaissance for Peace
- State Renaissance for Peace
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Tables
- Foreword
- Preface
- Acknowledgements
- Additional material
- Abbreviations
- Introduction Transitional Governance Today
- Part I The Unchartered Territory of Transitional Governance
- 1 The Rise and Internationalisation of Transitional Governance
- 2 Limitations of Existing Literature
- Part II Foundation and Actors of Transitional Governance * Sources of Ius in Interregno
- Part III Self-Determination through Transitional Governance
- Part IV Moderating External Influence on Transitional Governance
- Index
Summary
The proliferation and internationalisation of TG invite us to treat it as an object of study in its own right under international law. Given the limitations in literature, this study has to be carried out afresh. The fields of TJ and ius post bellum and the concepts of legitimacy and democracy are only of limited utility in this regard. In light of the ‘irrelevance of outcome’, this study is not so much concerned with the question of to what extent the decision of a political system is purely a domestic matter. It rather focuses on the state renaissance preceding and accompanying that decision: the very operation of choosing or replacing a political system in many cases takes time. It often results from a protracted process, TG, which includes, but is not limited to, reconstitutionalisation. Because of the recurrence and potential lasting impact of TG in various countries today, a refined legal analysis is now overdue.
Keywords
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- Information
- State Renaissance for PeaceTransitional Governance under International Law, pp. 63 - 78Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020