
Should States Intervene In Situations Outside Of Their Own Territory In Order To Safeguard Or Promote The Common Good? In This Book, Cedric Ryngaert Addresses This Key Question, Looking At How The International Law Of State Jurisdiction Can Be Harnessed To Serve Interests Common To The International Community. The Author Inquires How The Purpose Of The Law Of Jurisdiction May Shift From Protecting National Interests To Furthering International Concerns, Such As Those Relating To The Global Environment And Human Rights. Such A Shift Is Enabled By The Instability Of The Notion Of Jurisdiction, As Well As The Interpretative Ambiguity Of The Related Notions Of Sovereignty And Territoriality. There Is No Denying That, In The Real World, 'selfless Intervention' By States Tends To Combine With More Insular Considerations. This Book Argues, However, That Such Considerations Do Not Necessarily Detract From The Legitimacy Of Unilateralism, But May Precisely Serve To Trigger The Exercise Of Jurisdiction In The Common Interest.
This book investigates whether states possess the legal justification to intervene in foreign territories to promote the common good rather than strictly national interests. Cedric Ryngaert, a scholar of international law, examines the evolving framework of state jurisdiction. He argues that the inherent ambiguity within concepts of sovereignty and territoriality allows for a shift in legal interpretation, enabling states to address global concerns like environmental protection and human rights through unilateral action.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Legal scholars and practitioners view this work as a rigorous exploration of the shifting boundaries of state sovereignty in a globalized legal order. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is intended for an audience familiar with international law and political theory.
Page Count:
272
Publication Date:
2020-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press,
ISBN-10:
019259270X
ISBN-13:
9780192592705
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