Non-Recognition and Illegitimacy in International Law: A Comparative Analysis of Rhodesia and the Taliban Regime
This study examines how public international law can refuse to recognize governments that break fundamental human rights, such as equality and self-determination. It compares two major cases - Rhodesia’s white minority government in 1965 and the Taliban’s takeover of Afghanistan in 2021, which has imposed severe restrictions on women. Gender apartheid refers to a system of institutionalized, state-enforced segregation and exclusion of women from public life, education, employment, and basic freedoms solely on the basis of their sex, comparable in severity to racial apartheid.With reference to UN Resolutions 232 concerning Rhodesia and 2593 concerning Afghanistan and expert writings, the research analyzes how the world reacted, what legal rules were used, and what impact non-recognition created. Rhodesia was completely isolated by the United Nations, and after years of economic pressure, it collapsed and accepted Black majority rule in 1980. This shows that non-recognition worked strongly during the Cold War when countries were more united. In contrast, the Taliban face partial isolation in contemporary international order - some countries refuse recognition while others engage pragmatically - showing how divided today’s world is. The study concludes that non-recognition is a powerful normative and legal instrument but must be applied consistently and with humanitarian care.