“Under international law, a State is an entity that has a defined territory and a permanent population, under the control of its own government, and that engages in, or has the capacity to engage in, formal relations with other such entities. A State becomes failed when the third constitutive element of statehood, a government in effective control, fades away.”
OUTLINE
Chapter 2, Application of IHL by and in Failed States
Chapter 5, Situations where structures of authority have disintegrated
DOCUMENT
CASES
ICRC, Disintegration of State Structures (Part II. 2)
Case Study, Armed Conflicts in the Great Lakes Region (Part III. A. and C.)
Case Study, Armed Conflicts in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea (Parts 1 and 2)