Threats to state survival as emergencies in international law

<p>Does international law restrict the use of force by states in self-defense even when their survival is threatened? Should it? To answer these questions, I compare international law to domestic law and develop two ideal-types of emergency: in a &lsquo;subject emergency&rsquo; law imp...

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Main Author: Dill, J
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press 2023
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author Dill, J
author_facet Dill, J
author_sort Dill, J
collection OXFORD
description <p>Does international law restrict the use of force by states in self-defense even when their survival is threatened? Should it? To answer these questions, I compare international law to domestic law and develop two ideal-types of emergency: in a &lsquo;subject emergency&rsquo; law imposes absolute, justiciable limits on self-defense. In a &lsquo;community emergency&rsquo; the sovereign, not law, determines what is necessary for the survival of the community and its legal system: sustaining the rule of law justifies its temporary retreat. I show that international law has elements of both ideal-types. It imposes some absolute limits on self-defense. However, international law also retreats, allowing the victim state to determine the (1) aims, (2)&nbsp;ad bellum&nbsp;proportionality, and (3) end of self-defense, as if armed threats triggered community emergencies. These three retreats serve the function of sustaining the rule of international law over the states at war. Retreats (1) and (3) also help sustain the rule of international law over the international community. That international law does and should&nbsp;not&nbsp;treat armed threats against states simply as subject emergencies, shows it can only sustain the rule of international law in an emergency by retreating. This is a negative litmus test for international law's ability to diffuse anarchy in International Relations.</p>
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spelling oxford-uuid:38881e2f-c205-40a5-a3be-e9bd20de0c662023-09-13T08:09:09ZThreats to state survival as emergencies in international lawJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:38881e2f-c205-40a5-a3be-e9bd20de0c66EnglishSymplectic ElementsCambridge University Press2023Dill, J<p>Does international law restrict the use of force by states in self-defense even when their survival is threatened? Should it? To answer these questions, I compare international law to domestic law and develop two ideal-types of emergency: in a &lsquo;subject emergency&rsquo; law imposes absolute, justiciable limits on self-defense. In a &lsquo;community emergency&rsquo; the sovereign, not law, determines what is necessary for the survival of the community and its legal system: sustaining the rule of law justifies its temporary retreat. I show that international law has elements of both ideal-types. It imposes some absolute limits on self-defense. However, international law also retreats, allowing the victim state to determine the (1) aims, (2)&nbsp;ad bellum&nbsp;proportionality, and (3) end of self-defense, as if armed threats triggered community emergencies. These three retreats serve the function of sustaining the rule of international law over the states at war. Retreats (1) and (3) also help sustain the rule of international law over the international community. That international law does and should&nbsp;not&nbsp;treat armed threats against states simply as subject emergencies, shows it can only sustain the rule of international law in an emergency by retreating. This is a negative litmus test for international law's ability to diffuse anarchy in International Relations.</p>
spellingShingle Dill, J
Threats to state survival as emergencies in international law
title Threats to state survival as emergencies in international law
title_full Threats to state survival as emergencies in international law
title_fullStr Threats to state survival as emergencies in international law
title_full_unstemmed Threats to state survival as emergencies in international law
title_short Threats to state survival as emergencies in international law
title_sort threats to state survival as emergencies in international law
work_keys_str_mv AT dillj threatstostatesurvivalasemergenciesininternationallaw