The Plea of State of Necessity: A palatable normative framework for extraterritorial self-defense against Non-State Actors
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18800/iusetveritas.202102.001Palavras-chave:
Self-Defense, Non-state Actors, State responsibility, State of Necessity, United Nations Security CouncilResumo
The UN Charter law governing self-defense is inadequate to address emerging modalities of armed violence caused by non-State actors located in the territory of non-consenting third States. This paper offers an alternative grounded in the state of necessity as a circumstance excluding wrongfulness as per the law of State responsibility. The contention is that in integrating the rationale behind necessity as an excuse for non-performance of obligations and the conditions and processes under article 51 of the UN Charter, the law allows for an exercise of extraterritorial self-defense against non-State actors which safeguards the territorial State’s sovereignty and the need for a legal alternative of defense for the defending State without toeing the line of aggression.
Downloads
Downloads
Publicado
Como Citar
Edição
Seção
Licença

Este trabalho está licenciado sob uma licença Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

.png)
.png)