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OverviewThe study is the result of an international collaborative project supported and funded by the Carnegie Corporation of New York. This multi-year venture has involved a research team of some forty chapter authors and commentators. The research has been accompanied by three major workshops on project methodology, initial chapter reviews and final discussions. A point was made of including both scholars and practitioners involved in power-sharing settlements in the review process, in the hope that more would be learned about the actual implementation of the settlements under investigation. The project team was united in its wish to explore whether long-standing secessionist conflicts have been addressed effectively through the significant number of self-determination settlements that were generated in response to the wave of internal conflicts of the 1990s. It was also committed to testing whether consociationalist and integrative techniques of conflict settlement really are as mutually exclusive as is sometimes supposed, or whether they can in fact be mutually reinforcing. Finally, the project derives its impetus from the necessity to critically rethink the doctrine of self-determination. One may question whether its traditional, restrictive interpretation will be adequate in confronting the wide variety of future challenges to the territorial integrity of states. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Marc Weller , Barbara Metzger , Niall JohnsonPublisher: Brill Imprint: Martinus Nijhoff Volume: No. 60 Dimensions: Width: 16.00cm , Height: 4.60cm , Length: 24.00cm Weight: 1.550kg ISBN: 9789004164826ISBN 10: 9004164820 Pages: 798 Publication Date: 25 June 2008 Audience: College/higher education , Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsPart I: Preface; Introduction: Settling Self-determination Conflicts Marc Weller; Part 1: Historical and Theoretical Framework; Chapter 1: Nationalism, Self-Determination and the Doctrine of Territorial Unity James Mayall; Chapter 2: Why the Legal Rules on Self-determination do not Resolve Self-determination Disputes Marc Weller; Chapter 3: The Logics of Power-Sharing, Consociation and Pluralist Federations Brendan O’Leary; Part 2: Case Studies; Chapter 4: Complex Power-Sharing in and over Northern Ireland: A Self-determination Agreement, a Treaty, a Consociation, a Federacy, Matching Confederal Institutions, Inter-Governmentalism and a Peace Process Brendan O’Leary; Chapter 5: Resolving the Bougainville Self-determination Dispute: Autonomy or Complex Power-Sharing? Anthony J. Regan; Chapter 6: Resolving Self-determination Disputes Thorough Complex Power-Sharing Arrangements: The Case of Mindanao, Southern Philippines Mark Turner; Chapter 7: Power Sharing and International Intervention: Overcoming the Post-Conflict Legacy in Bosnia and Herzegovina Florian Bieber; Chapter 8: Interim Governance for Kosovo: The Rambouillet Agreement and the Constitutional Framework Developed under UN Administration Marc Weller; Chapter 9: Power-sharing in Macedonia? Farimah Daftary /Eben Friedman; Chapter 10: Gagauzia and Moldova: Experiences in Power-sharing Priit Jaerve; Chapter 11: Case-study of the Conflict in South Ossetia Ketevan Tsikhelashvili; Part II: Part 3: Vertical Power-sharing; Chapter 12: Addressing the Self-determination Dispute Marc Weller ; Chapter 13: Power-sharing and the Vertical Layering of Authority: A Review of Current Practices Stefan Wolff; Chapter 14: Electoral Arrangements in Systems of Complex Power Sharing Andrew Reynolds; Chapter 15: Third Party Involvement in Self-determination Conflicts Ulrich Schneckener; Part 4: Functional Power-sharing; Chapter 16: Education Mark Turner; Chapter 17: Resolving Self-Determination Disputes Using Complex Power-sharing: The role of Economic Policies John Bradley; Chapter 18: Policing Territories Previously Subject.ReviewsAuthor InformationDr Marc Weller is the Director of the European Centre for Minority Issues, in Flensburg, Germany. He is also a Reader in international law at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of the Lauterpacht Research Centre for International Law and Hugh Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |