Using the principle of legality to interfere in state affairs: Study in international human rights law

Authors

  • Dr. Ahmed Ishag Shanab Mohmmed
    • Dr. Mimona Saeed Adam Abdalla
      DOI https://doi.org/10.56989/benkj.v1i2.647

      Keywords:

      legitimacy appear , Sovereignty of states , Sovereignty , International law , international human rights law

      Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

      SDG 16
      SDG 16 Peace, Justice and Strong Institutions
      71%

      Abstract

      The study dealt with the use of the principle of legitimacy to interfere in the affairs of states. The problem of the study was that the phenomenon of using the principle of international legitimacy to interfere in the affairs of states has become a phenomenon that threatens the sovereignty of states, which led to many questions that the study will answer. The importance of the study stemmed from the many problems caused by the phenomenon of using the principle of legitimacy, and that legitimacy has the basis for its control, and that intervention in most cases targets the sovereignty of states and not the protection of human rights. In accordance with the principles of international human rights law. The study followed the method Descriptive Analytical and Legal Approach. The study reached several results, the most important of which are: The principle of international intervention turned into a legal rule in international covenants and thus gained its mandatory power. International intervention in the affairs of states in accordance with the principles of international humanitarian law has become a legitimate matter, as a result of the internationalization of the rules of international human rights law.

      Abstract Views: 815 PDF download (Arabic) Downloads: 357

      References

      Published

      10/01/2021

      Issue

      Section

      Articles

      How to Cite

      Ishag , A., & Saeed , M. (2021). Using the principle of legality to interfere in state affairs: Study in international human rights law. Ibn Khaldoun Journal for Studies and Researches, 1(2). https://doi.org/10.56989/benkj.v1i2.647