1st Edition

The United Nations and Peace Enforcement Wars, Terrorism and Democracy

By Mohamed Osman Copyright 2002

    This title was first published in 2002.This original text studies the UN system for the maintenance of international peace and security in the face of threats to the peace, breaches of the peace and acts of aggression. It assesses the Security Council attempts to employ enforcement measures under Chapter VII of the UN Charter in response to inter-state and intra-state conflicts, paying attention to the effect of the Council's increasing involvement in internal situations, both on the development of the system and on the outcome of conflicts. Filling a notable lacuna in contemporary literature, Mohamed Osman studies peace enforcement on its own and within an independent theoretical and empirical framework. The book will appeal both to students of the UN and humanitarian intervention, but also to international lawyers and political philosophers concerned with questions of intervention and sovereignty. In addition, its detailed case studies make the volume an excellent reference tool.

    Contents: Introduction; The theory of peace enforcement; The role of the security council in the Kuwait crisis; The role of the USA in peace enforcement operations; Constitutional problems; Peace enforcement and international terrorism; The cold war; The post-cold war period; Conclusion; Bibliography; Index.

    Biography

    Osman, Mohamed Awad

    ’...a work of originality and considerable relevance to the international debate on the role of the UN. Osman’s careful, critical, argument is a most welcome...book which would appeal both to students of the UN and of humanitarian intervention, also to international lawyers and political philosophers concerned with questions of intervention and sovereignty.’ Professor Fred Halliday, London School of Economics and Political Science, UK ’The timeliness of this volume’s appearance cannot be overstated...the volume offers considerable illumination.’ Journal of the Commonwealth Lawyers’ Association ’...a useful addition to the literature on the United Nations...makes a number of very interesting points and there is much here that is genuinely thought provoking.’ The Cyprus Review