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International community

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Theinternational communityis a term used ingeopoliticsandinternational relationsto refer to a broad group of people and governments of the world.[1]

Usage

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Aside from its use as a general descriptor,[2]the term is typically used to imply the existence of a common point of view towards such matters as specific issues ofhuman rights.[3][4]It is sometimes used in calling for action to be taken against an enemy,[5]e.g., action against perceivedpolitical repressionin a target country. The term is also commonly used to imply legitimacy and consensus for a point of view on a disputed issue,[4][6]e.g., to enhance thecredibilityof a majorityvotein theUnited Nations General Assembly.[3][7]

Criticism

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Several prominent legal figures and authors have argued that the term is more often used to describe a small minority of states, and not literally all nations or states in the world.[1][3][8]According toInternational Criminal CourtjuristVictor P. Tsilonis,it refers to "the interests of the most powerful states" or "seven to ten states".[8]President of theInternational Tribunal for the Law of the SeaPaik Jin-hyunand co-authorsLee Seokwooand Kevin Tan argue that it could refer to "some 20 affluent states", giving the example of those not members of theNon-Aligned Movement,[3]while Professor Peter Burnell of theUniversity of Warwicksuggests that a number of very important states, such asChina,Russiaand those of theArabandIslamicworlds, are often distant from the concept of the "international community" and do not necessarily endorse every initiative associated with it, for example, by abstaining from keyvotesin theUnited Nations Security Council.[1]Noam Chomskystates that the term is used to refer to theUnited Statesand its allies andclient states,as well as allies in the media of those states.[9][10][11]British journalistMartin Jacquessays: "We all know what is meant by the term 'international community', don't we? It'sthe West,of course, nothing more, nothing less. Using the term 'international community' is a way of dignifying the west, of globalising it, of making it sound more respectable, more neutral, and high-faluting. "[12]According to American political scientistSamuel P. Huntington,the term is a euphemistic replacement for the earlier propaganda term "Free World".[13]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcBurnell, Peter (23 October 2013).Democracy Assistance: International Co-operation for Democratization.Routledge. p. 6.ISBN978-1-135-30954-1.
  2. ^Pisillo Mazzeschi, Riccardo (30 September 2021),"Collective Human Rights and Political Objectives of the International Community",International Human Rights Law: Theory and Practice,Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 473–501,doi:10.1007/978-3-030-77032-7_25,ISBN978-3-030-77032-7
  3. ^abcdPaik, Jin-Hyun;Lee, Seok-Woo;Tan, Kevin (2013).Asian Approaches to International Law and the Legacy of Colonialism: The Law of the Sea, Territorial Disputes and International Dispute Settlement.Routledge. p. 145.ISBN978-0-415-67978-7.The media may declare, for example, that the nuclear programme of this or that developing or non-aligned country is opposed by the 'international community', whereas of the non-aligned, comprising some 122 Stares, the majority, if not all of them, support the right of their membership to carry out such programmes, opposition being manifest only among a relatively small proportion of the total number of States, which now stands at 193. Vagueness is a pervasive feature of media reporting and of political discourse. But use of the term 'international community' as implying 'all States' in full knowledge that it could only cover some 20 affluent States, is more than merely vague. It amounts to failure to take due account of the basic Charter principle.... While it is clear that the term 'international community' does not comprise all States, or even a majority of them, there is no indication to which States that term, as used in the World Summit Outcome, is intended to refer.
  4. ^abVeit, Alex (4 October 2010).Intervention as Indirect Rule: Civil War and Statebuilding in the Democratic Republic of Congo.Campus Verlag.ISBN978-3-593-39311-7.Through the expansion of peacebuilding and related practices, the term international community has been modified. It refers still primarily to the collective of states. More recently, it is often used to describe world society. Yet as world society cannot constitute an actor, the latter meaning seems to serve mainly as a legitimating term for the former.... The international community is a group of actors that claims to employ a common consensual perspective.
  5. ^Byers, Michael;Nolte, Georg(29 May 2003).United States Hegemony and the Foundations of International Law.Cambridge University Press.p. 30.ISBN9781139436632.
  6. ^Travouillon, Katrin; Bernath, Julie (December 2020)."Time to break up with the international community? Rhetoric and realities of a political myth in Cambodia".Review of International Studies.47(2). Cambridge University Press: 231–250.doi:10.1017/S026021052000042X.ISSN0260-2105.S2CID230578572.
  7. ^Danilenko, Gennadiĭ Mikhaĭlovich (1 January 1993).Law-Making in the International Community.Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.p. 204.ISBN0792320395.Those who believe that resolutions have become or are becoming an effective modern tool for rule-creation in an expanded international society often explain this phenomenon by reference to the fact that they manifest 'the general will of the international community [that] has acquired a certain legislative status.' Generally, a more cautious attitude prevails in state practice.
  8. ^abTsilonis, Victor(23 November 2019).The Jurisdiction of the International Criminal Court.Springer Nature. pp. 7, 23, 173.ISBN978-3-030-21526-2.As analysed in more detail below, the term 'international community' does not have the meaning one would expect, i.e. the representation of the majority of States; on the contrary, the term skilfully implies the representation of the interests of the most powerful states. [p. 7]... Nebulous concepts such as 'attracting international interest' or 'international community' need to be avoided at all costs [p. 23]... A term through which the author attempts to imply all the recognised States in the world, and not simply the seven to ten states implied by the common but "misty" term "international community". [p. 173]
  9. ^"The Crimes of 'Intcom'".
  10. ^Jones, Katrina (13 June 2012)."Israel, US violators of international law, says Noam Chomsky".The News Tribe.Archived fromthe originalon 1 January 2022.Retrieved16 August2021.
  11. ^"Noam Chomsky on Iran | Satellite Magazine".satellitemagazine.ca.June 2012. Archived fromthe originalon 14 November 2013.Retrieved16 August2021.
  12. ^Jacques, Martin(24 August 2006)."What the hell is the international community?".the Guardian.Retrieved16 August2021.
  13. ^Huntington, Samuel P. The Clash of Civilizations, 72 Foreign Aff. 22 (1992–1993)