Stephen C. Neff
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The instinctive revulsion of the moralist for neutrality has manifested itself, since 1945, in two principal contexts: the UN and the Cold War. The UN system was a more thoroughgoing embodiment of the just-war outlook than the League of Nations had been. On a number of occasions since 1945, states have invoked the traditional rights of belligerents, and, conversely, duties of neutrals. This chapter looks at some of the principal instances, and also at the approach taken by the San Remo Manual on the various issues in question. The distinctive feature of the post-1945 period is the extent to which sovereign rights have become a substitute for the ordinary rights of belligerents, rather than merely a supplement to them. The chapter looks at the post-1945 practice in two areas rich in pre-1945 precedent: blacklisting and reprisal. It describes the main 'growth area' since 1945: necessity, in the context of self-defence.

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