cover image: Vol V| Issue IV | July-August, 2022: Self-Determination and Conflict of Norms in the Ethiopia Civil

20.500.12592/gnphv7

Vol V| Issue IV | July-August, 2022: Self-Determination and Conflict of Norms in the Ethiopia Civil

25 Jul 2022

The international law created and supported the norm of self- Besides all these, the civil war has raised questions about determination but also jealously guards the related norm the stability of regional relations in the Horn of Africa, of protection of the territorial integrity and sovereignty the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD) of states. [...] The first was boundaries, it would undermine the stability of the the end of decolonization; the second the end of the Cold international order by placing it in a perpetual state War. [...] The creeping in of federalism and divided the country ethnically through one of these norms rode on the back of the civil wars in nine regional semi-autonomous states and two multi- Europe after the Cold War, which provided cause for the ethnic chartered administrations, under the auspices re-invention of the norm of self-determination. [...] For example, the notion of create a basis for two of the set of conflict of norms at a greater Somalia was a creation of the UK Colonial the heart of the civil wars in Ethiopia. [...] It was also the the idea of the self-determination of ethnic groups that essence of two wars in the Horn of Africa, the Shifta War emerged from post-Cold War redesigning of the meaning with Kenya (1963-67) and the Ogaden War with Ethiopia of the norm of self-determination.
Pages
44
Published in
Kenya