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Quasi-state Entities and International Criminal Justice Legitimising Narratives and Counter-Narratives Contemporary Security Studies Series

Langue : Anglais

Auteur :

Couverture de l’ouvrage Quasi-state Entities and International Criminal Justice

This book explores the intended and unintended impact of international criminal justice on the legitimacy of quasi-state entities (QSEs).

In order to do so, the concept of ?quasi-state entity? is introduced to distinguish actors in statehood conflicts that aspire to statehood, and fulfil statehood functions to a greater or lesser degree, including the capacity and willingness to deploy armed force, but lack the status of sovereign statehood. This work explores the ability of QSEs to create and maintain legitimacy for their actions, institutions and statehood projects in various constituencies simultaneously. It looks at how legitimacy is a prerequisite for success of QSEs and, using critical legitimacy theory, assesses the legitimating narratives of QSEs and their statehood adversaries. The book links international criminal justice to statehood projects of QSEs and their success and legitimacy. It looks at the effects of international criminal justice on the ability to create and maintain legitimacy of QSEs, an approach that leads to new insights regarding international courts and tribunals as entities competing with states over statehood functions that increasingly have to take the legal implications of their actions into consideration. Most important, a close assessment of the legitimising narratives of QSEs, counter narratives, and the messages sent by international criminal justice with which QSEs have to deal, and their ability to overcome legitimacy crises, provides insight on QSEs and the complex processes of legitimation.

This book will be of much interest to students of international criminal justice, political violence, security studies and IR.

1. Introduction

2. Legitimacy As Success For Quasi-State Entities

3. International Criminal Justice

4. The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia and the Impact on Legitimacy in Kosovo

5. The Special Tribunal For Lebanon And The Legitimacy Of Hezbollah

6. The International Criminal Court, And The Self-Referral Of The Situation In Northern Mali

7. Conclusion

Postgraduate, Professional, and Undergraduate

Ernst Dijxhoorn is Teaching and Research Fellow at the Department of War Studies at King’s College London. He is co-editor of Militancy and Violence in West Africa (with James Gow and Funmi Olonisakin, Routledge 2013).