Analyzing the Use of Force under International Law

Examining the Legality and Control of Military Power under International Law

Authors

  • Dr. Rintoo Singh Author

Keywords:

use of force, international law, utilization of power, international legality, legally prohibited, 21st century, military power, exercise control, self-defense, ICJ

Abstract

The paper before you exhibits an attempt to give a response to the theory – is the utilization of power as per the open global law and a few issues emerging from it – in the event that the utilization of power is permitted, at that point when it gets worldwide legality and authenticity? In the event that it's legally prohibited, regardless of whether such preclusion is general principle with no criticisms or there is an exception to that standard? No assignment is increasingly significant as we enter the 21st century than finding a concurred structure for the exercise of military power, and for the control of its exercise. I wound up Legal Adviser to the Foreign Office in 1991. It examines two issues the relationship between self-preservation and the protection of essential security interests of states, and the Court's investigation of the conditions for self-preservation. We presume that the ICJ has to a great extent affirmed its current law in the field and abstained from making any explicit, critical new contribution to the idea of self-preservation.

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Published

2019-04-01

How to Cite

[1]
“Analyzing the Use of Force under International Law: Examining the Legality and Control of Military Power under International Law”, JASRAE, vol. 16, no. 5, pp. 195–199, Apr. 2019, Accessed: Jan. 20, 2026. [Online]. Available: https://ignited.in/index.php/jasrae/article/view/10893