Current implication of the right to self-determination : an analysis on Eastern Ukranian territorial secessionist claims

Thumbnail Image
Date
2015
Authors
Fontenla Pita-Baamonde, Alberto
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
The annexation of Crimea by Russia and the secessionist tendencies in the east of the Ukraine, among other places, highlight the need to clarify once and for all the implications of the right to self-determination. Even though treaties and leading international instruments implement numerous regulatory regulations on the right and where, no doubt, there is an almost uniform practice of the states in terms of its application in colonial territories, this is not the case when referring to situations in a different context, this being one of the most unsettled regulations in international law. The automatic identification between self-determination and secession should be left aside since this can adopt other practices, in accordance with the provisions set out in the UNGA Resolution 2625 (XXV), reserving the secessionist option for highly exceptional cases where human rights are violated. Any conception of selfdetermination that fails to take into consideration the numerous models of association and human interdependence is, in the best of cases, incomplete and distorted1. This observation does not retract from the value of the different cultures or local authorities, but rather, it lends support to the fact of increasing the common links, and the interdependencies between nations, economies and the spheres of power2. 1 Anaya1996 pp. 75-96. 2 Idem.
Description
Second semester University: University of Helsinki.
Keywords
secession, Ukraine, self-determination
Citation