New Regional Authorities
Self-Determination and the Global South

By (author) Katherine M. Beall

ISBN13: 9781009645560

Imprint: Cambridge University Press

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Format: Hardback

Published: 31/12/2025

Availability: Not yet available

Description
The idea that regional organizations rightly occupy a central place in human rights, global governance, and international intervention has come to be taken-for-granted in international politics. Yet, the idea of regions as authorities is not a natural feature of the international system. Instead, it was strategically constructed by the leaders in the Global South as a way of maintaining their voice in global decision-making and managing (though not preventing) outside interference. Katherine M. Beall explores changes in the norms and practice of international interference in late 1970s and early 1980s, a time when Latin American and African leaders began to empower their regional organizations to enforce human rights. This change represented a form of quiet resistance to the imposition of human rights enforcement and a transformation in the ongoing struggle for self-determination. This book will appeal to scholars of international relations, international history, and human rights.
Acknowledgements; 1. Changing approaches to interference in the Global South; 2. Self-determination through regional authority; 3. The imposition of human rights enforcement; 4. Latin America and the emergence of regional authority over human rights; 5. From non-interference to African enforcement; 6. Short-circuiting regional institutions in the Middle East; 7. Regional authority and self-determination in international politics; References; Index.
  • International institutions
  • Human rights
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List Price: £90.00