Law involves a system of authorized force used to uphold and improve public order goals while prohibiting unauthorized coercion. Therefore, law and coercion are not opposing concepts.
In contrast, formal legal structures are not established when there is natural social agreement; they are created when there is disagreement. Those who are more influential within a group impose their interpretation of common interests through the legal system, which includes sanctions. Law recognizes the necessity and inevitability of coercion in social processes but aims to organize, control, and optimize it.
The international legal system differs from these general legal characteristics primarily in the degree of organization and centralization of coercion. In national systems, coercion is organized, relatively centralized, and mostly controlled by the state apparatus. In the international system, this is not the case. Historically, individual actors have retained the right to unilaterally use force to protect and assert their legal rights.
Action with Respect to Threats to the Peace, Breaches of the Peace and Acts of Aggression. When the Security Council has determined the existence of one of these situations under Article 39, it can decide provisional measures under Article 40.
Pursuant to Article 41, the Council can decide what measures not involving the use of armed force to be applied in order to give effect to its decisions. If such measures under Article 41 prove to be inadequate or the Council consider them to be so, it may take actions involving the use of armed force. Article 42 of the Charter states that the Council may take such action by air, sea or land forces as may be necessary to maintain or restore international peace and security. So far, measures not involving armed force has initially been applied in every situation where force has finally been authorized by the Council.
Breach of peace = hostility between armed units of two states. In SC Resolution 502, the Security Council considered the Argentine invasion of the Falklands to be a breach of the peace even prior to UKs counter offensive. In Resolution 660 the Council determined that the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait was a breach of the peace.
Unwilling or Unable Test
43 videos|394 docs
|
|
Explore Courses for UPSC exam
|