Output details
20 - Law
University of Aberdeen
Le Conseil de sécurité doit-il respecter les droits de l'homme dans son action coercitive de maintien de la paix?
Output is a annual volume reviewing cases, legislation etc. up until the end of the year under review. Whilst this is the 2007 volume it was not published until 2008 (and was therefore not eligible for RAE 2008). Email confirmation of this has been provided by the publisher and can be provided on request.
The UN Security Council has to respect, in its coercive peace-keeping action, those human rights which are not peremptory and which are inscribed in the basic instruments for the protection of human rights drawn up under UN auspices, except when this is incompatible with the pursued objective of safeguarding peace. It is also bound, according to the Charter, by the (only obligatory) international customary law of human rights. That is also an obligation conditioned by the success of its peace-keeping action. Finally, the Security Council has to respect the international peremptory law of human rights.