Tag: Myanmar
Resolutions and Investigations for Myanmar: Accountability, Evidence, and the Limits of International Action
Without enforcement, international resolutions risk becoming symbolic gestures in the face of systematic atrocity crimes.”
International Sanctions – Coercive Policy Tools and the Limits of Enforcement
Sanctions signal international condemnation—but their success depends on enforcement, coordination, and political will.”
Statelessness: Legal Identity, Structural Exclusion, and the Limits of Protection
Breakdown of Rule of Law in Myanmar: Military Coup, State Violence, and the Erosion of Democratic Institutions
The breakdown of rule of law in Myanmar reflects not only a seizure of power, but the institutionalization of violence as a tool of governance.”
A Coup in Myanmar: Democratic Breakdown and Early Indicators of Atrocity Risk
Ethnic Cleansing in Myanmar: State Violence and the Rohingya Crisis
The scale and systematic nature of violence against the Rohingya signals not only ethnic cleansing, but the potential commission of atrocity crimes requiring urgent international response.”
The Refugee Crisis: Sixty Million Displaced by Conflict, Instability, and Persecution
Displacement on this scale is no longer a regional challenge—it is a global crisis requiring sustained international responsibility and coordinated action.”
