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Contents
- Preliminary Material
- Main Text
- 1 Law and force
- 2 The prohibition of the use of force
- 3 Invitation and intervention: civil wars and the use of force
- Recent Application of the Law on Intervention in Civil Wars: Africa after the Cold War
- The Nicaragua Case
- Armed Activities on the Territory of the Congo (DRC v Uganda)
- The Right of a Government to Invite Outside Intervention
- Intervention and Protection of Nationals
- Intervention in Response to Prior Foreign Intervention
- Forcible Intervention to Assist the Opposition
- Intervention and Counter-Intervention in Angola and Mozambique
- The End of the Cold War and the Start of the ‘War on Terror’
- 4 Self-defence
- 5 Collective self-defence
- 6 The use of force against terrorism: a new war for a new century?
- 7 The UN and the use of force
- The UN in The Cold War
- A New Legal Order? Chapter VII After The Cold War
- Article 41: Transformation
- Peacekeeping After The Cold War
- Peacekeeping and Enforcement Action in Yugoslavia and Somalia: The Blurring of Traditional Distinctions
- Rwanda
- The Relation of UN Peacekeeping and Chapter VII
- Reform of UN Peacekeeping
- Conclusion
- 8 Security Council authorization for member states to use force
- 9 Regional peacekeeping and enforcement action
- Introduction
- Cooperation Between The UN and Regional Organizations
- ‘Regional Arrangements and Agencies’
- The Constitutional Bases for Regional Peacekeeping
- The Legality of Regional Action in Terms of The UN Charter and General International Law
- A Reinterpretation of Article 53 of the UN Charter?
- Security Council Authorization of Use of Force By Regional Organizations
- Conclusion
- Further Material