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Between Borders and Bodies: Sovereignty, Universality, And The Crisis of Enforcement in International Law

Atrocities such as genocide and war crimes persist not despite international law, but within its very structure. Although international law is designed to protect humanity, it repeatedly fails to do so due to its inability to enforce its most fundamental norms. In the absence of enforcement, the law...

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Main Author: Hassanien, Aliaa Riad, Aliaa Riad
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Hassanien, Aliaa Riad, Aliaa Riad
author_browse Hassanien, Aliaa Riad, Aliaa Riad
author_facet Hassanien, Aliaa Riad, Aliaa Riad
author_sort Hassanien, Aliaa Riad, Aliaa Riad
collection Thesis
description Atrocities such as genocide and war crimes persist not despite international law, but within its very structure. Although international law is designed to protect humanity, it repeatedly fails to do so due to its inability to enforce its most fundamental norms. In the absence of enforcement, the law exists—but merely stands still. This failure stems from the structural contradictions embedded in the system—specifically, the tension between the principles of sovereignty and universality. As a result, international law has become a selective, politicized, and ineffective framework. Incidents such as the Rwandan genocide and the civil wars in Syria and Sudan demonstrate the extent of this malfunction. Even with the evolution of international law’s tools and enforcement mechanisms, these instruments have operated inconsistently, highlighting the selectivity and politicization that affect both the enforcement of rulings, as in the ICC and ICJ, and decisions regarding intervention as seen in the Responsibility to Protect principle. In contrast, Islamic law has offered governing principles that enhance accountability. The very definition of sovereignty in Islam, along with the Caliphate governance system—as opposed to the state-consent-dependent model—have fostered communal responsibility and entrenched decentralized authority, embedding accountability within the collective. Thus, comparative studies can help reimagine enforcement models in international law—models that are capable of combating impunity. Reconceptualizing the two core principles of international law—sovereignty and universality—may offer a path toward empowering the system.
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institution American University in Cairo (Egypt)
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:35:59.828Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
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source_str AUC Knowledge Fountain — bepress
spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-3694 Between Borders and Bodies: Sovereignty, Universality, And The Crisis of Enforcement in International Law Hassanien, Aliaa Riad, Aliaa Riad Atrocities such as genocide and war crimes persist not despite international law, but within its very structure. Although international law is designed to protect humanity, it repeatedly fails to do so due to its inability to enforce its most fundamental norms. In the absence of enforcement, the law exists—but merely stands still. This failure stems from the structural contradictions embedded in the system—specifically, the tension between the principles of sovereignty and universality. As a result, international law has become a selective, politicized, and ineffective framework. Incidents such as the Rwandan genocide and the civil wars in Syria and Sudan demonstrate the extent of this malfunction. Even with the evolution of international law’s tools and enforcement mechanisms, these instruments have operated inconsistently, highlighting the selectivity and politicization that affect both the enforcement of rulings, as in the ICC and ICJ, and decisions regarding intervention as seen in the Responsibility to Protect principle. In contrast, Islamic law has offered governing principles that enhance accountability. The very definition of sovereignty in Islam, along with the Caliphate governance system—as opposed to the state-consent-dependent model—have fostered communal responsibility and entrenched decentralized authority, embedding accountability within the collective. Thus, comparative studies can help reimagine enforcement models in international law—models that are capable of combating impunity. Reconceptualizing the two core principles of international law—sovereignty and universality—may offer a path toward empowering the system. 2026-01-31T08:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2638 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3694/viewcontent/aliaa_riad_hassanien_thesis.pdf Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain Governance universal values sovereignty rebellion civil state shura R2P limitations enforcement. International Law
spellingShingle Governance
universal values
sovereignty
rebellion
civil state
shura
R2P
limitations
enforcement.
International Law
Hassanien, Aliaa Riad, Aliaa Riad
Between Borders and Bodies: Sovereignty, Universality, And The Crisis of Enforcement in International Law
title Between Borders and Bodies: Sovereignty, Universality, And The Crisis of Enforcement in International Law
title_full Between Borders and Bodies: Sovereignty, Universality, And The Crisis of Enforcement in International Law
title_fullStr Between Borders and Bodies: Sovereignty, Universality, And The Crisis of Enforcement in International Law
title_full_unstemmed Between Borders and Bodies: Sovereignty, Universality, And The Crisis of Enforcement in International Law
title_short Between Borders and Bodies: Sovereignty, Universality, And The Crisis of Enforcement in International Law
title_sort between borders and bodies sovereignty universality and the crisis of enforcement in international law
topic Governance
universal values
sovereignty
rebellion
civil state
shura
R2P
limitations
enforcement.
International Law
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/2638
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/3694/viewcontent/aliaa_riad_hassanien_thesis.pdf
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