Essays about: "Legitimate peace"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 19 essays containing the words Legitimate peace.
-
1. A SEAT AT THE ADULT’S TABLE : A QUALITATIVE STUDY ON YOUTH INCLUSION IN PEACE AGREEMENTS
University essay from Uppsala universitet/Institutionen för freds- och konfliktforskningAbstract : Studies on the inclusion of non-warring parties in peace agreements have risen significantly in the research community. Focus has mostly been on civil society and women’s inclusion while youth inclusion has rarely been studied. READ MORE
-
2. Peace Through Tourism : Visiting the Korean Borderland
University essay from Linnéuniversitetet/Institutionen för samhällsstudier (SS)Abstract : According to South Korea, there is no North Korea. In fact, the government considers itself the only legitimate state on the peninsula, much alike North Korea’s view. Officially, the two countries on the Korean peninsula are at war, having been in a ceasefire for 70 years. READ MORE
-
3. For Whom the Bugle Calls – Past and Present of Third-Party Enforcement in International Law
University essay from Lunds universitet/Juridiska institutionen; Lunds universitet/Juridiska fakultetenAbstract : This thesis examines the phenomena of third-party enforcement in public international law, in a historical as well as in a contemporary perspective. To that end, it traces the role of such enforcement measures from the past into the present. READ MORE
-
4. Cooking Peace? : Authoritative mediators' formulation in the Aceh conflict 2004-2005 and the Kosovo conflict 2005-2007
University essay from Uppsala universitet/Institutionen för freds- och konfliktforskningAbstract : Many mediators exercise power across borders, facilitating talks, formulating agendas and manipulating interests of hostile parties. However, the problem of how mediators justify their use of power and how the terms of this justification legitimate mediators’ strategic conduct has not been systematically theorized and tested in the leverage literature yet. READ MORE
-
5. Influencing the United Nations Security Council - the role of representative legitimacy : A qualitative comparison of elected members' influence in decisions made on the Syrian Conflict
University essay from Uppsala universitet/Institutionen för freds- och konfliktforskningAbstract : This thesis investigates the topic of elected members of the United Nations Security Council by addressing the research question under what conditions is an elected member of the United Nations Security Council likely to influence decisions in maintaining international peace and security? In investigating the explanatory power of the theoretical argument ‘representative legitimacy’, which suggests that elected members making their proposed actions legitimate by anchoring these with the broader UN membership are more likely to face less opposition and thus increase the likelihood for influence, it tests the hypothesis an elected member anchoring its proposed actions with the broader UN membership is more likely to influence the UNSC decisions. The study is conducted through a structured, focused comparison of three elected members, New Zealand 2015-2016, Japan 2016-2017, and Sweden 2017-2018, and their influence in decisions made on the Syrian conflict. READ MORE