“Self-determination”, the famous catchword of World War I, has become one of the most potent political slogans of our time. In its name battles continue to be waged, and no continent—and scarcely any country—is immune from its grip. The use of force within the most recent period alone in such diverse places as Grenada, Lebanon, the Falkland Islands, Afghanistan, Chad, Angola, Namibia, Punjab, and Kampuchea was related in some way or other to the issue of self-determination. Within the UN, self-determination is viewed by the majority as a kind of “supernorm”, a principle which has been lifted from the realm of politics and morality to the very pinnacle of legal rules. According to this perspective, even the linchpin of the UN Charter, the principle prohibiting the threat or use of force in international relations (Art. 2, para. 4), may be overridden in the name of the more sacred “right of self-determination”.