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008 150903s2016 enk b 001 0 eng
010 _a 2015034761
020 _a9781107119130
040 _aDLC
_beng
_cDLC
_erda
_dDLC
042 _apcc
050 0 0 _aKZ1269
_b.T48 2016
245 0 4 _aTheory of self-determination
260 _aNew York
_bCambridge University Press
_c2016
490 0 _aASIL studies in international legal theory
504 _aIncludes bibliographical references and index.
505 8 _aMachine generated contents note: Introduction: the conundrum of self-determination Fernando R. Tesón; 1. Self-determination and moral variation Bas van der Vossen; 2. The case for national self-determination Christopher W. Morris; 3. The right to self-determination: earned, not inherent Frédéric Mégret; 4. The right to exist and the right to resist Jens David Ohlin; 5. Self-determination in three movements Patrick Macklem; 6. Self-determination for national minorities Alan Patten; 7. Self-determination, dissent, and the problem of population transfers Matthew Lister; 8. Civil disobedience, dirty hands, and secession Michael Blake; 9. 'Mars for the martians?' On the obsolescence of self-determination John R. Morss; 10. The evolution of self-determination of peoples in international law Elizabeth Rodri;guez-Santiago.
520 _a"When can a group legitimately form its own state? Under international law, some groups can but others cannot. But the standard is unclear, and traditional legal analysis has failed to elucidate it. In The Theory of Self-Determination, leading scholars chart new territory in our theoretical conception of self-determination. Drawing from diverse scholarship in international law, philosophy, and political science, they attempt to move beyond the prevailing nationalist conceptions of group definition. At issue are such universal questions as, when does a group qualify as a 'people'? Does history matter? Or is it a question of ethnic status? Are these matters properly solved by popular vote? Anchored in modern analytical political philosophy but with implications for a wide range of scholarship, this volume will prove essential for scholars and practitioners of international law, global justice, and international relations"--
650 0 _aSelf-determination, National
_938561
650 7 _aLAW / International.
_2bisacsh
_938562
700 1 _aTeson, Fernando R
_934741
906 _a7
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