Secession - the Last Resort for Minority Protection

'Secession' is a word that brings fear to nations. It reeks of conflict, violence and instability. It is also a measure of last resort. It sometimes brings hope to minorities that are in despair and who feel permanently excluded from policy making. This article looks at some of the faces o...

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Main Author: de Villiers, Bertus
Format: Journal Article
Published: Sage Publications 2013
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/53546
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author de Villiers, Bertus
author_facet de Villiers, Bertus
author_sort de Villiers, Bertus
building Curtin Institutional Repository
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description 'Secession' is a word that brings fear to nations. It reeks of conflict, violence and instability. It is also a measure of last resort. It sometimes brings hope to minorities that are in despair and who feel permanently excluded from policy making. This article looks at some of the faces of secession. It investigates how international law is vague on the one hand and pragmatic on the other hand when it comes to secession. It shows how, in recent times, secession has been endorsed by the international community in cases such as East Timor, Eritrea and Kosovo while in Ethiopia and Canada legal mechanisms exist for managing demands for secession. Consideration is given to some of the pre-requisites for secession. Finally general observations are made about secession as a mechanism to protect minorities.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-535462017-10-12T08:11:08Z Secession - the Last Resort for Minority Protection de Villiers, Bertus 'Secession' is a word that brings fear to nations. It reeks of conflict, violence and instability. It is also a measure of last resort. It sometimes brings hope to minorities that are in despair and who feel permanently excluded from policy making. This article looks at some of the faces of secession. It investigates how international law is vague on the one hand and pragmatic on the other hand when it comes to secession. It shows how, in recent times, secession has been endorsed by the international community in cases such as East Timor, Eritrea and Kosovo while in Ethiopia and Canada legal mechanisms exist for managing demands for secession. Consideration is given to some of the pre-requisites for secession. Finally general observations are made about secession as a mechanism to protect minorities. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/53546 10.1177/0021909612439684 Sage Publications restricted
spellingShingle de Villiers, Bertus
Secession - the Last Resort for Minority Protection
title Secession - the Last Resort for Minority Protection
title_full Secession - the Last Resort for Minority Protection
title_fullStr Secession - the Last Resort for Minority Protection
title_full_unstemmed Secession - the Last Resort for Minority Protection
title_short Secession - the Last Resort for Minority Protection
title_sort secession - the last resort for minority protection
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/53546