Despite the extensive literature on statehood, which disentangles it on multiple sides (including political, social, and legal), it is still imperative to investigate the notion of state in international law. Rarely has a study explored how territorially based entities, whose nature is controversial, are perceived in multilateral fora open only to “states” and whether this puts the very existence of a legal or theoretical concept of state in international law into question.

Statehood? Sometimes! The Absence of a Legal and Theoretical Concept of State in International Law

cimiotta
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Abstract

Despite the extensive literature on statehood, which disentangles it on multiple sides (including political, social, and legal), it is still imperative to investigate the notion of state in international law. Rarely has a study explored how territorially based entities, whose nature is controversial, are perceived in multilateral fora open only to “states” and whether this puts the very existence of a legal or theoretical concept of state in international law into question.
In corso di stampa
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11391/1621474
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