recognition
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The Unequal Architecture of Recognition: A Critical Study of the Politics of Recognition in Sudan and Palestine amid Genocide
The notion of formal recognition within the international system is viewed as a formal acknowledgement for an entity to qualify as a state. Sudan and Palestine demonstrate contrasting dimensions of the recognition politics. Sudan is fully recognised as a sovereign state, and the state recognition remains largely unaffected despite extensive documentation of atrocities in the…
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Subjects of Law or Outlaws? The Legal Personality of Non-State Armed Groups
States are considered the primary legal entities and subjects of international law with the power and capacity to make treaties, however they can still make agreements with non-state entities, such as NSAGs, international organizations, individuals and people who acquire legal personalities and struggle for equal rights. The legal status of non-state armed groups (NSAGs) in…
