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Human Rights Accountability of Non-Universally Recognised States and State-Like Entities

Edited by: Kushtrim Istrefi et al.

ISBN13: 9781035365128
To be Published: August 2026
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Limited
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £125.00





This book explores the human rights accountability of non-universally recognized states, unlawful entities that exercise effective control over territories, and sui generis subjects and territories when they exercise state-like powers. As they exercise these powers, they can affect the enjoyment of rights just as any recognized state could. But because of the indeterminate nature of these actors’ international legal status or lack of sufficient recognition to join international organisations, it is not always clear what human rights obligations they hold, what secondary rules of state responsibility apply to them, and how other international actors - including international organizations - should engage with them on issues of accountability. Overall, the book seeks to question whether the current doctrine of international subjectivity is adequate to provide for accountability for the acts of state-like entities. It also intends to delve into the strategic use of legal subjectivity by international actors, and its consequences for human rights accountability.

Combining legal theory with case studies, contributing authors challenge the traditional state-centred approach of international human rights law by highlighting gaps in protection. They address accountability broadly and analyse legal responsibility and monitoring alongside less formal mechanisms. Concluding that human rights accountability cannot depend solely on formal statehood, the book proposes that wherever authorities hold power over people’s lives, they must be assessed against human rights standards.

Insightful and thought-provoking, this book is a vital resource for scholars, policy makers and students of human rights law, public international law, international politics and public policy. It will benefit anyone seeking a deeper understanding of the implementation of human rights in non-universally recognised states and state-like entities.

Subjects:
Human Rights and Civil Liberties
Contents:
1. Introduction: Human Rights Accountability of State Like and Non-Universally Recognised States 1
Cedric Ryngaert, Kushtrim Istrefi, Luca Pasquet and Lucas Roorda
2. Statehood, territory and non-state territorial entities 11
Jure Vidmar
3. Reorienting responsibility: looking to the functional capacity of non-state effective territorial entities to achieve human rights accountability 36
Sarah McGibbon
4. Towards the accountability of state-like entities under international human rights law 63
Linda Hamid
5. Limits to human rights obligations of secessionist entities: protection gap uncertainty and legitimation of illegality 90
Júlia Miklasová
6. Human rights accountability for sui generis entities: investigating domestic avenues 115
Haris Huremagić and Fritz Kainz
7. The determination of accountability for human rights on leased territories 143
Michael J. Strauss
8. Unrecognised states and overseas territories at the UN Human Rights Council’s Universal Periodic Review 161
Frederick Cowell
9. Contested statehood and international legal personality: the case of the Holy See 184
John R Morss
10. International human rights standards and accountability of Kosovo 207
Robert Muharremi and Kushtrim Istrefi
11. With limited power still comes great responsibility: human rights obligations and responsibility in Palestine as a limited state 233
Shadi Sakran
12. A ‘non-state’ acting as a state? The case of the protection and promotion of human rights in Somaliland 255
Cristiano D’Orsi
13. Human rights accountability in the context of the de facto division of Cyprus 284
Aristotelis Constantinides
14. Human rights accountability in Western Sahara: responsibility without recognition 313
Andrea Maria Pelliconi and Jed Odermatt