Various individual and group participants in the Arab Spring have noticeably embraced and reaffirmed predominant patterns of human expectation and claims occurring worldwide regarding individual dignity and worth, self-determination of peoples, related human rights with respect to relatively free and genuine participation in governmental processes and the standard of legitimacy of governments, democracy as a universal core value, and the right of rebellion or revolution and the concomitant right of a given people to seek self-determination assistance. As documented, each of these forms of human expectation and claim has a present legal and policy mooring in basic international legal instruments, including the United Nations Charter and a number of authoritative human rights instruments. This article also contains a section near the end on the propriety of U.S. and NATO use of force in Libya to protect civilians and to support regime change or self-determination assistance.
Detailed Information
Institution
University of Houston Law Center
Discipline/Approach...
Topic
Abstract
Date of Publication
Recommended citation
Paust, Jordan J., International Law, Dignity, Democracy, and the Arab Spring (July 15, 2013). 46 Cornell International Law Journal 1 (2013)
