International Humanitarian Intervention and its Impact on the Sovereignty of the Political System (Iraqi Political System State of Study)
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.59670/ml.v20iS12.5902Abstract
This study examines the relationship between international humanitarian intervention and the problem of sovereignty. This concept is particularly problematic, both legal and political, after the end of the cold war, the collapse of the Soviet Union and the emergence of the United States at the top of the pyramid, resulting in a need to protect human rights after the emergence of the question of minorities and their duty to protect them. And so the study came to try to link and combine these two concepts with how to deal with them so that international intervention, even if it is humane, runs counter to the principle of State sovereignty that States have always tried to uphold to protect them from any external aggression against them, But does this give States the freedom to curtail freedoms and violate human rights simply to demand political rights guaranteed to them by international instruments, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the United Nations? This study therefore came to dismantle and clarify the relationship between these two mutually reinforcing concepts of "intervention and sovereignty", which hold.
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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.
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