An informative book focusing on the internationalisation and legalisation of peace agreements to settle intra-state conflicts between state and non-state parties. Cindy Wittke focuses on two key issues: how international courts and tribunals deal with peace agreements; and what implications the United Nations Security Council's involvement in the negotiation and implementation of peace agreements has for the agreements' legal nature, the status of the non-state parties to agreements and the interpretation of peace agreements. Wittke argues that the processes of negotiating and implementing peace agreements between state and non-state parties create new spheres, spaces and forms of post-conflict law making and law enforcement. For example, contemporary peace agreements can simultaneously take the form and function of internationalised transitional constitutions and agreements governed by international law. The resulting characteristics of contemporary peace agreement lead to permanent ambiguities shaping their interpretation and enforcement.
By:
Cindy Wittke Imprint: Cambridge University Press Country of Publication: United Kingdom Dimensions:
Height: 235mm,
Width: 157mm,
Spine: 18mm
Weight: 530g ISBN:9781108424462 ISBN 10: 1108424465 Pages: 274 Publication Date:21 June 2018 Audience:
Professional and scholarly
,
Undergraduate
Format:Hardback Publisher's Status: Active
1. Peace agreements between state and non-state parties – a research endeavour; 2. General considerations for approaching the internationalisation and legislation of peace agreements between state and non-state parties; 3. Only scraps of paper? How international courts and tribunals treat peace agreements between state and non-state parties; 4. The Security Council and the internationalisation of peace agreements between state and non-state parties.
Cindy Wittke is the leader of the research group 'Frozen and Unfrozen Conflicts' at the Leibniz Institute for East and Southeast European Studies (IOS) in Regensburg, Germany.