BOOKS - Peacemaking, Power-sharing and International Law: Imperfect Peace
US $9.71
66760
66760
Peacemaking, Power-sharing and International Law: Imperfect Peace
Author: Martin Wahlisch
Year: September 5, 2019
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 2.5 MB
Language: English
Year: September 5, 2019
Format: PDF
File size: PDF 2.5 MB
Language: English
This monograph provides a contemporary analysis of the frictions between peacemaking and international human rights law based on the cases of postconflict power-sharing in Lebanon and Bosnia-Herzegovina. In this context it evaluates the long-standing debate in the United Nations and human rights bodies about the 'imperfect peace'. Written from a practitioner-scholarly viewpoint and drawing from new authentic sources, the book describes the mechanisms used in peace agreements and post-conflict constitutions for managing ethnic or religious diversity, explains their legal limits under international human rights law, and provides a conceptual framework for analysing the nexus between law and peacemaking. The book argues that the relationship between the content of peace agreements and post-conflict constitutions, their negotiation process and the element of time, needs to be untangled to better understand the legal limits of statebuilding in the aftermath of armed conflict. It is a key resource for scholars in human rights law and peace and conflict studies, advisers in peace processes, constitution-makers, and peace mediators.