Jean D'Aspremont’s research while affiliated with University of Amsterdam and other places

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Publications (1)


Responsibility for Coups d'Etat in International Law
  • Article

June 2010

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643 Reads

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12 Citations

Jean D'Aspremont

It is the aim of this article to demonstrate that the impact of coups d’état in international political discourse outweighs actual consequences under the law of responsibility in international law. This article argues that - leaving aside the hypothesis of effective control by a foreign state - coups d’état, despite being systematically condemned in political discourse, do not engage the responsibility of any state as they cannot be attributed to any international legal subject. The article however argues that coups can constitute preparatory actions to a subsequent internationally wrongful act.

Citations (1)


... 302 Some argue that no state responsibility arises from a coup, so the practical effect of the international community's declaration of illegality is more political and moral than firmly based on legal principle. 303 government coming into power. 304 Sometimes, the United Nations has refused to give to the coup regime that state's seat if the United Nations, has condemned the overthrow of a democratically elected leader 305 and even has taken direct legal action against the coup government. ...

Reference:

The West's Colonization of Muslim Land and the Rise of Islamic Fundamentalism
Responsibility for Coups d'Etat in International Law
  • Citing Article
  • June 2010