The Role of International Law in Rebuilding Societies after Conflict

Great Expectations

Brett Bowden editor Jeremy Farrall editor Hilary Charlesworth editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:16th Apr '09

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The Role of International Law in Rebuilding Societies after Conflict cover

This volume of essays investigates the many roles international law can play in rehabilitating societies after conflict.

International law can create great expectations in those seeking to rebuild societies that have been torn apart by conflict. For outsiders, international law can mandate or militate against intervention, bolstering or undermining the legitimacy of intervention. International legal principles promise equality, justice and human rights. Yet international law's promises are difficult to fulfil. This volume of essays investigates the phenomenon of post-conflict state-building and the engagement of international law in this enterprise. It draws together original essays by scholars and practitioners who consider the many roles international law can play in rehabilitating societies after conflict. The essays explore troubled zones across the world, from Afghanistan to Africa's Great Lakes region, and from Timor-Leste to the Balkans. They identify a range of possibilities for international law in tempering, regulating, legitimating or undermining efforts to rebuild post-conflict societies.

Review of the hardback: 'This timely collective work addresses the important question of what role international law plays in post-conflict reconstruction … By presenting a range of perspectives, and even conflicting views, this book appropriately portrays this theme in its complexity and fosters understanding and debate about it. Therein lay its strengths.' The Journal of the Institute of International and Comparative Law

ISBN: 9780521509947

Dimensions: 234mm x 157mm x 20mm

Weight: 660g

348 pages