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Democratic Legitimacy and the Recognition of States and Governments
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 January 2008
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In a seminal 1992 article Thomas Franck postulated the emergence in international law of a right to democratic governance.1 Franck argued that, increasingly, the acceptance of a government by other States turns on whether the government governs with the consent of its people.
In supporting this notion, Franck pointed to events such as the 1991 effort by Haitian military and police authorities to overthrow the elected President of Haiti, Jean-Bertrand Aristide. Although those authorities exercised complete control over Haiti, the international community condemned the coup leaders, refused to engage in normal diplomatic relations with them or to seat their representatives at international organisations, and instead continued to recognise the exiled President Aristide as representing the legitimate government of Haiti. Severe economic and ultimately military sanctions were imposed on Haiti, and finally, in 1994, the coup leaders were forced to relinquish power. President Aristide then returned to Haiti to complete his term as president.
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References
1. Franck, Thomas M., “The Emerging Right to Democratic Governance” (1992) 86 A J.I.L. 46.Google Scholar For a collection of essays testing Franck's thesis in various areas of international law, including an abbreviated essay based on this article, see Gregory, Fox and Brad, Roth (Eds), Democratic Governance and International Law (forthcoming).Google Scholar
2. There are different faces of “recognition”. One face is the express or tacit acknowledgment by States of the legal capacity of a new State to avail itself of international rights and obligations or for a new government to engage in foreign relations on behalf of its State. (In particular, “tacit” acknowledgment arises for States that prefer not to view changes of government as a question of “recognition” but, rather, as a question of the level of relations with the new government.) In some cases, even if recognition is not acknowledged, the new entity may be accorded some type of special status. A further face of “recognition” occurs when a new State is granted admission to an international organization or when an organ of an international organisation accepts the credentials of the delegates of a new government. Yet another face concerns the effects of recognition (or nonrecognition) on rights and obligations within a State's national legal system (e.g. litigation in the State's courts).
3. The standard point of departure on these conditions is the 1933 Montevideo Convention on the Rights and Duties of States, League of Nations T.S. 165 (1936), p.19.Google ScholarSee also Brierly, J. L., The Law of Nations (6th edn, Waldock, H. (Ed.), 1963), p.137.Google ScholarSee generally Grant, Thomas D., “Defining Statehood: The Montevideo Convention and its Discontents” (1999) Col. J. Trans. L. 37, 403.Google Scholar
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11. By October 1862 the Confederacy had decisively repulsed several Union advances and had unleashed spectacular offensives of its own. Many believed that continuing the war was futile, since it was necessary for the North to conquer vast stretches of southern territory, cripple southern resources and destroy the fighting power of the Confederate armies. Thus, by autumn 1862, the Confederacy had a serious claim on recognition by foreign governments: McPherson, James M., Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era (1988), pp.546–557.Google Scholar
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135. idem, pp.122–123.
136. idem, pp.136–137, 140–142.
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