Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- List of acknowledgments
- Introduction: the spread of liberal democracy and its implications for international law
- PART I THE NORMATIVE FOUNDATIONS OF A RIGHT TO POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
- PART II DEMOCRACY AND INTER-STATE RELATIONS
- PART III DEMOCRACY AND THE USE OF FORCE
- 7 Sovereignty and human rights in contemporary international law
- 8 “You, the People”: pro-democratic intervention in international law
- 9 Pro-democratic intervention by invitation
- 10 The illegality of “pro-democratic” invasion pacts
- 11 International law and the “liberal peace”
- PART IV DEMOCRATIZATION AND CONFLICTING IMPERATIVES
- PART V CRITICAL APPROACHES
- Index
7 - Sovereignty and human rights in contemporary international law
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 May 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- List of acknowledgments
- Introduction: the spread of liberal democracy and its implications for international law
- PART I THE NORMATIVE FOUNDATIONS OF A RIGHT TO POLITICAL PARTICIPATION
- PART II DEMOCRACY AND INTER-STATE RELATIONS
- PART III DEMOCRACY AND THE USE OF FORCE
- 7 Sovereignty and human rights in contemporary international law
- 8 “You, the People”: pro-democratic intervention in international law
- 9 Pro-democratic intervention by invitation
- 10 The illegality of “pro-democratic” invasion pacts
- 11 International law and the “liberal peace”
- PART IV DEMOCRATIZATION AND CONFLICTING IMPERATIVES
- PART V CRITICAL APPROACHES
- Index
Summary
anachronism … 1: an error in chronology; esp: a chronological misplacing of persons, events, objects, or customs in regard to each other … 2: a person or a thing that is chronologically out of place; esp: one that belongs to a former age and is incongruous if found in the present. …
Webster's Third International DictionarySince Aristotle, the term “sovereignty” has had a long and varied history during which it has been given different meanings, hues and tones, depending on the context and the objectives of those using the word. Bodin and Hobbes shaped the term to serve their perception of an urgent need for internal order. Their conception influenced several centuries of international politics and law and also became a convenient supplementary secular slogan for the various absolute monarchies of the time. Sovereignty often came to be an attribute of a powerful individual, whose legitimacy over territory (which was often described as his domain and even identified with him) rested on a purportedly direct or delegated divine or historic authority but certainly not, Hobbes's covenant of the multitude notwithstanding, on the consent of the people.
The public law of Europe, the system of international law established by the assorted monarchs of the continent to serve their common purposes, reflected and reinforced this conception by insulating from legal scrutiny and competence a broad category of events that were later enshrined as “matters solely within the domestic jurisdiction.”
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- Democratic Governance and International Law , pp. 239 - 258Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2000
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