Peace-keeping is the deployment of a United Nations presence in the field, hitherto with the consent of all the parties concerned, normally involving United Nations military and /or police personnel and frequently civilians as well. Intelligence for Multilateral Decision and Action - 第 395 頁Perry L. Pickert 著 - 1997 - 610 頁完整檢視 - 關於此書
| Christian Tomuschat - 1993 - 368 頁
...through such peaceful means as those foreseen in Chapter VI of the Charter of the United Nations". Peace-keeping is defined as the deployment of a United...police personnel and frequently civilians as well. The "consent" to which he refers, is the consent of the States involved in a dispute. For a number... | |
| Michael E. Brown - 1993 - 292 頁
...Peace foreshadows a much more active UN role, not least in the area of peacekeeping, which it defines as "the deployment of a United Nations presence in...field, hitherto with the consent of all the parties concerned."41 The innocent-sounding word "hitherto" has caused great controversy, but it is only realistic... | |
| Douglas Roche - 1993 - 212 頁
...foreseen in Chapter VI of the Charter of the United Nations. • Peace-keepingis the deployment of a UN presence in the field, hitherto with the consent of all the parties concerned, normally involving UN military and/or police personnel and frequently civilians as well. Peace-keeping is a technique... | |
| Academie de Droit International de la Haye - 1994 - 502 頁
..."peacekeeping""14, a concept not based on any explicit Charter text. The Secretary-General defines peacekeeping as "the deployment of a United Nations presence in...and/or police personnel and frequently civilians as well""15. Between 1948 and 1990 there have been 18 of these peacekeeping operations. Ten were essentially... | |
| A. C. Kiss, J. G. Lammers - 1993 - 324 頁
...in Chapter VI of the Charter of the United Nations; peace-keeping, defined as the deployment of a UN presence in the field, hitherto with the consent of all the parties concerned, normally involving UN military and/or police personnel and frequently civilians as well; peace-building, defined as action... | |
| John Gerard Ruggie - 1996 - 266 頁
...proposed departures from previous practice were critical. First, An Agenda for Peace defined peacekeeping as "the deployment of a United Nations presence in...hitherto with the consent of all the parties concerned. ..." (par. 20). Here was a clear signal that the UN might, in some instances, seek to deploy peacekeepers... | |
| Renéo Lukic, Allen Lynch - 1996 - 472 頁
...Secretary-General's understanding of the two terms: 'peace-keeping', according to Boutros Boutros-Ghali, is 'the deployment of a United Nations presence in the...hitherto with the consent of all the parties concerned . . . Peace-keeping is a technique that expands the possibilities for both the prevention of conflict... | |
| Michael Bothe, Natalino Ronzitti, Allan Rosas - 1997 - 586 頁
...for in the UN Charter.121 Under the definition proposed by the Secretary General, 'peace-keeping' is 'the deployment of a United Nations presence in the...parties concerned, normally involving United Nations military/or police personnel and frequently civilians as well';122 the involvement of military forces... | |
| Michael Charles Pugh - 1997 - 222 頁
...Boutros BoutrosGhali's widely disseminated 'An Agenda for Peace'. In that document, 'peace-keeping' was defined as 'the deployment of a United Nations presence in the field, hitherto with the consent of the parties concerned, normally involving United Nations military and/or police personnel and frequently... | |
| United States. Congress. House. Committee on International Relations - 1997 - 232 頁
...environments in which these large and complex missions would operate when, in 1992, he redefined peacekeeping as "the deployment of a United Nations presence in the field, hitherto (my emphasis) with the consent of all the parties concerned..."31 This 10 foreboding observation, that... | |
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