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Edinburgh Law School doctoral researcher publishes new article on Self-Determination and Use of Force in Rojava

Sat 8 May 2021

Self-Determination and Use of Force in Rojava

A new article titled "Self-Determination and Use of Force in Rojava" by Edinburgh Law School PhD candidate, Loqman Radpey, has been published as part of the Journal of Human Rights and Social Work (JHRSW).

The article was published by Springer on 8 May 2021. It is available via the Springer Link website and is profiled on the Edinburgh Centre for International and Global Law (ECIGL) publications archive.

"Self-Determination and Use of Force in Rojava" is the latest article in the Journal of Human Rights and Social Work, focussing on human rights practice. The journal is a peer-reviewed journal resource for educators, practitioners, and administrators in the field of social work. The journal provides research-based human rights tools, theoretical discussions of human rights, as well as guidelines for improving practice.

Loqman Radpey is a doctoral researcher at Edinburgh Law School and a research member of the ECIGL. He has particularly focused on peopleness, self-determination, secession and statehood. Since 2013, he has studied and written about Kurdish self-determination and statehood, self-determination and the Kurds, the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and Rojava’s democratic confederalism, and the legal status of the Kurdish territories in international law.

Abstract

After living under the colonialism of the Ottoman Empire, France, and Syria, the Kurds of Syria are developing landmark policy atypical of the Middle East. Recent developments triggered by the 2011 Syrian insurgency, the rise of the ISIS, the onslaught on Kurdish cities, and the resistance of People’s Protection Units (YPG) and Women’s Protection Unit (YPJ) under the command of Syrian Democratic Forces, have resulted in Syrian Kurds asserting de facto confederalism in the autonomous region known as Rojava in 2016. This allows the polyethnic population living in the area to retain independent control over their internal and external affairs within the Syrian state along the border with the autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in northern Iraq. Turkey invaded and occupied the Kurdish regions of Rojava under the pretext of eliminating Kurdish forces and Daesh to prevent an allegedly ‘terrorist threat’. Turkey justified its invasion by claiming the right of self-defense under Article 51 of the UN Charter. However, Turkey’s use of force against the non-state entity of Rojava, which is exercising its right to self-determination, and annexing its territory have legal boundaries. Far from raising any connection between war and terrorism in the Syrian civil war context, the article tries to prove the illegality of the use of force in the context of self-determination. In this situation, other states can take more serious measures to stop Turkey and may request the accused state to comply with erga omnes rules related to self-determination. Also, third states are not prohibited to aid self-determination movements politically—short of dispatching troops.

Self-Determination and Use of Force in Rojava, Journal of Human Rights and Social Work (Springer 2021)

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