How do states prevent the recognition of territories that have unilaterally declared independence? At a time when the issue of secession is becoming increasingly significant on the world stage, this is the first book to consider this crucial question. Analysing the efforts of the governments of Serbia, Georgia, and Cyprus to prevent the international recognition of Kosovo, South Ossetia, Abkhazia, and northern Cyprus the work draws on in depth interviews with a number of leading policy makers to explain how each of the countries has designed, developed, and implemented its counter secession strategies.
After explaining how the principle of the territorial integrity of states has tended to take precedence over the right of self-determination, it examines the range of ways countries facing a separatist threat can prevent recognition by other states and considers the increasingly important role played by international and regional organisations, especially the United Nations, in the recognition process.
Additionally, it shows how forms of legitimisation
or acknowledgement are also central elements of any counter-recognition
process, and why steps to prevent secessionist entities from participating in
major sporting and cultural bodies are given so much attention.
Finally, it questions the effects of these counter
recognition efforts on attempts to solve these territorial conflicts. Drawing
on history, politics, and international law this book is the first and only
comprehensive account of this increasingly important field of foreign policy.
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction
1: Secession and Recognition in International
Politics
2: Current Cases of Contested Secession
3: Reasons for Contesting Secession and Preventing
Recognition
4: Planning and Implementing a Counter-Recognition
Strategy
5: Preventing State Recognition
6: The Role of International Organisations
7: Judicial Bodies and Counter Recognition
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
James KER-LINDSAY, The Foreign Policy of Counter
Secession: Preventing the Recognition of Contested States, Oxford, Oxford
University Press, 2012 (240 pp.)
James
Ker-Lindsay, Eurobank EFG Senior Research Fellow on the Politics of South East
Europe, European Institute, London School of Economics and Political Science
James
Ker-Lindsay's research focuses on issues relating to conflict, peace, and
security in the Western Balkans and the Eastern Mediterranean. He is Eurobank
EFG Senior Research Fellow on the Politics of South East Europe at the European
Institute, London School of Economics and Political Science.
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