International Law and the Relationality of States: A Critique of Theories of Recognition
Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Dedication -- Table of Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- Outline of Chapters -- 1. Case Study Part I: The Constitutional Set-up of the Republic of Cyprus -- Introduction -- Part One -- Introduction -- The State Structure -- The Constitutional Positions -- The Constitutional Powers -- Conclusion -- Part Two -- Introduction -- The Last Years of the British Rule on the Island -- Greek Cypriots' Anti-Colonial Movement -- Turkish Cypriots' Reaction to the Greek Cypriot Movement -- An Agreement between Greece and Turkey -- Instigators of the Constitutional Collapse: Enosis and Taksim -- Conclusion -- 2. Case Study Part II: The Cyprus Problem -- Introduction -- Part One -- The Thirteen-Point Proposals -- Part Two -- Inter-communal Negotiations and Military Interventions -- Part Three -- The Unilateral Declaration of Independence and International Non-recognition -- Part Four -- Existential Consequences of Non-recognition -- Introduction -- Trade, Travel, and Property Rights -- Political Consequences of Turkey's Tutelage -- Conclusion -- 3. Theories of Recognition Under International Law -- Introduction -- Part One -- Absolute Sovereignty of States -- Absolute (Internal) Sovereignty: Bodin and Hobbes -- Absolute (External) Sovereignty: Grotius and Vattel -- Conclusion -- Part Two -- Introduction -- Constitutive Theory -- Declarative Theory -- Conclusion -- 4. Hegel's Theory of Recognition -- Introduction -- Part One -- International Law and Recognition in Hegel's Philosophy of Right -- Part Two -- Recognition in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit -- Introduction -- Consciousness: Sense-Certainty, Perception, and Understanding -- Self-consciousness: Desire, Recognition, and Lordship and Bondsman -- Conclusion -- Part Three -- Contextual Repercussions of Lordship and Bondsman -- Introduction.