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Secession and Annexation: The Case of Crimea
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 06 March 2019
Abstract
The recent crisis involving the territory of Crimea has been characterized both as a case of wrongful annexation and as one of rightful secession. Territory and competing territorial claims lie at the heart of the normative questions of secession and annexation. Any normative theory of secession or of annexation must therefore address their territorial aspect: It must explain why one agent rather than another has a valid claim to the disputed territory. One of the most interesting, yet controversial, normative accounts of secession has been offered by choice theorists of secession. Choice theorists adopt a rather permissive stance, based on the normative significance of political self-determination. Choice theories, however, have been widely criticized for failing to provide a satisfactory account of what legitimates the seceding group's territorial claim. This article argues that it is possible to remedy choice theories’ failure to address the question of territorial justification adequately. To do so, this article offers a two-tier account of territory that is grounded in the normative significance of self-determination. It defends this account of territory by showing that it is implied by our normative condemnation of annexation. It argues that the same reasons that warrant opposition to annexation provide support for secession, In closing, this article revisits the case of Crimea in light of its two-tier account of territory, and considers what role international law and institutions might play in addressing this type of situation.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- German Law Journal , Volume 16 , Issue 3: Special Issue - The Crisis in Ukraine , July 2015 , pp. 581 - 607
- Copyright
- Copyright © 2015 by German Law Journal GbR
References
1 The referendum took place on 16 March 2014. Results reported by election officials indicated ninety-five percent of votes in favor of joining Russia, based on eighty percent of papular participation. See BBC, Crimea Referendum: Voters “Back Russia Union,” (Mar. 16, 2014), http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-26606097 (last accessed June 18, 2015); BBC, Crimea Exit Poll: About 93% Back Russia Union, (Mar. 16, 2014), http://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-26598832 (last accessed June 18, 2015).Google Scholar
2 Here and throughout, the term “normative” is used in its moral-philosophical sense, not in Its legal-juridical sense.Google Scholar
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41 One might object that using the principle of community property to build this analogy is question-begging: Why pick this principle rather than other possible principles of marriage contracts? Because the principle of community property constitutes a middle ground between the two extremes of complete merging and complete separation of assets. Thus, the burden of proof here is on those claiming that a more extreme principle should be used. Of course, opting for complete separation of assets would only reinforce the secessionists’ case.Google Scholar
42 Otherwise put, what makes a group the same group over time is not a matter of what the group is—matching some set of objective criteria—but rather a matter of what the group does—engaged in sustained social and political cooperation,Google Scholar
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65 Relatedly, the existence of a moral right does not depend on how easy or difficult it would be to realize that right. If you are a millionaire, it might be very easy for you to give me $100, but that does not mean I have the right to receive $100 from you. Conversely, if you hit me with your car and you have no insurance, it might be very difficult for you to compensate me appropriately, but that does not mean that I do not have the right to receive appropriate compensation.Google Scholar
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