The Case Caroline. A precedent of international self-defense?

Authors

  • Eduardo José Pintore Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Derecho.

Keywords:

Case Caroline, preventive self-defense, Falkland Islands, permanent attack, permanent danger, state of necessity.

Abstract

The part of the international doctrine, that argue for the existence of a right to preventive self-defense in the international law, invoke the case Caroline as his precedent. This article aims to show why this case is neither a precedent of preventive self-defense nor a precedent of self-defense. The conclusion is that the case Caroline is to be revaluate as a precedent of international necessity and not as one of self-defense, on the ground of the absence of a state as active subject, that execute an armed attack in the sense of the legal institution of the international self-defense.

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Author Biography

Eduardo José Pintore, Universidad Nacional de Córdoba. Facultad de Derecho.

Doctor en Derecho y Magíster Legum (LL.M.) ambos por la Freie Universität Berlin, Alemania. Completó sus estudios de derecho (Carrera de Abogacía) en la Universidad Nacional de Córdoba en donde fue varios años Ayudante Alumno y Adscripto en la materia de Derecho Internacional Público. Realizó estudios de Derecho e investigaciones en la Università degli Studi di Bologna, Italia.

Published

2011-11-16

How to Cite

Pintore, E. J. (2011). The Case Caroline. A precedent of international self-defense?. Revista De La Facultad De Derecho, 2(2). Retrieved from https://revistas.unc.edu.ar/index.php/refade/article/view/6289

Issue

Section

Doctrine and research