03734nam 22006373u 450 991076559970332120240509095906.09781351131759135113175397813511317421351131745(CKB)4100000009350219(MiAaPQ)EBC5896148(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/32614(ScCtBLL)1f619078-2ec4-4524-ac64-2835dd3d2fc9(OCoLC)1163855184(oapen)doab32614(EXLCZ)99410000000935021920191003d2020 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierRoutledge handbook of state recognition /edited by Gëzim Visoka, John Doyle and Edward Newman1st ed.Taylor & Francis2019London ;New York, New York :Routledge,[2020]©20201 online resource (521 pages)9780815354871 0815354878 Includes bibliographical references and index.1. Introduction: statehood and recognition in world politics -- PART I. Theoretical and normative perspectives -- 2. Theories of state recognition -- 3. The evolution of state recognition -- 4. Recognition of states in international -- 5. Self-determination and the recognition of states -- 6. The ethics of state recognition -- 7. Power politics and state recognition -- 8. International recognition and human rights treaties -- 9. State recognition in a transitional international order -- PART II. Pathways to independent statehood -- 10. Pathways to independence and recognition -- 11. Dynamics of secession and state birth -- 12. Referendums on independence and secession -- 13. Recognition of unilateral secession -- 14. Remedial secessionPART III. Actors, forms and the process of state recognition -- 15. Bilateral recognition of states -- 16.Recognition of governments -- 17. Statehood and collective recognition: practice of statesand UN organs -- 18. Collective non-recognition of states -- 19. Engagement without recognition -- 20. Parliamentary recognition -- 21. Recognition of states by regional organisations: the European Union’s contested experience -- 22. The international court of justice and the recognition of states -- 23. The counter-diplomacy of state recognition24. State fragility and international recognition -- 25. The derecognition of states -- 26. Contested states and their everyday quest for recognition -- PART IV. Case studies of contemporary state recognition -- 27. Palestine -- 28. Taiwan -- 29. Western Sahara -- 30. South Sudan -- 31. Kosovo -- 32. Somalilan -- 33. Abkhazia and South Ossetia -- 34. Transdniestria and Northern Cyprus -- 35. Brexit and the question of Irish unity -- 36. Towards a critical agenda on state recognition.state; recognitionState, TheHandbooks, manuals, etcRecognition (International law)Handbooks, manuals, etcSelf-determination, NationalHandbooks, manuals, etcState, TheRecognition (International law)Self-determination, National320.1Visoka Gëzim897281Visoka GëzimDoyle John1964-Newman Edward1970-MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQAuAdUSABOOK9910765599703321Routledge handbook of state recognition3653172UNINA