International Humanitarian Law Part 1

International humanitarian law Part 1

 

1

Where Precision Is the Aim: Locating the Targeted Killing Policies of the United States and Israel within International humanitarian law
MICHAEL ELLIOT
Canadian Yearbook of International Law
Volume 47, 2009 p.99

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2

Is Compliance with International Humanitarian Law Susceptible to Logical Measurement?
Ilias Bantekas
European Journal of Law Reform
Volume 12, Issue 1/2, 2010 p.100-105

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The application of International Humanitarian Law by States is necessarily dependent on factors such as “interests”as well as certain “qualities”of States, such as size or wealth. Despite their contractual undertakings, nations fully apply the jus in bello under the terms of a particular formula. This article depicts this formula in a very rudimentary manner, positing that compliance is measureable and corresponds to a number which is derived by adding a State’s interests and qualities.

3

The International Court of Justice and applied forms of reparation for international human rights and humanitarian law violations
Gentian Zyberi
Utrecht Law Review
Volume 7, Issue 1, January 2011 p.204-215

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4

The Continuing Relevance of Customary International Law in the Development of International humanitarian law
Nirmala Chandrahasan
Sri Lanka Journal of International Law
Volume 21, Number 2, 2009 p.55

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5

The International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia : paving the way for modern International humanitarian law enforcement
Andrew Woodcock
Northern Ireland Legal Quarterly
Volume 62, Number 1, Spring 2011 p.119

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6

Will the responsibility to protect principle improve enforcement of International Criminal Law ?
Grant Niemann
Criminal Law Journal
Volume 35, Number 2, April 2011 p.70

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The responsibility to protect principle is made up of well-recognised international humanitarian law norms but is packaged in new wrappers. It was introduced in order to replace the humanitarian intervention principle which is widely considered to have failed. Will the new look responsibility to protect principle fair better or is it destined to suffer the same fate as its predecessor?

7

The Law of Occupation: Continuity and Change of international Humanitarian Law, and its Interaction with International human rights law , by Yutaka Arai-Takahashi
Noam Lubell
Human Rights Quarterly
Volume 33, Number 1, February 2011 p.249

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8

Privileging Asymmetric Warfare? Part I: Defender Duties under International Humanitarian Law
Samuel Estreicher
Chicago Journal of International Law
Volume 11, Number 2, Winter 2011 p.425

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9

The Principle of Distinction in Virtual War: Restraints and Precautionary Measures under International Humanitarian Law
Tilburg Law Review
Volume 15, Number 1, 2010 p.69

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10

The Law of Armed Conflict: International Humanitarian Law in War
Hartmann, Jacques
Nordic Journal of International Law
Volume 80, Number 1, 2011 p.121-123

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11

The Era of Cyber Warfare: Applying International Humanitarian Law to the 2008 Russian-Georgian Cyber Conflict
Lesley Swanson
Loyola of Los Angeles International & Comparative Law Review
Volume 32, Number 2, Spring 2010 p.303

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12

The Isayeva Cases of the European Court of Human Rights: The Application of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights Law in Non-International Armed Conflicts
Eriko Tamura
Chinese Journal of International Law
Volume 10, Number 1, March 2011 p.129-140

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13

THE STATUS OF PEACE OPERATION PERSONNEL UNDER INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW
Ola Engdahl
Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law
Volume 11, 2008 p.109-138

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14

MISTREATMENT OF THE WOUNDED, SICK AND SHIPWRECKED BY THE ICRC STUDY ON CUSTOMARY INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW
James P. Benoit
Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law
Volume 11, 2008 p.175-219

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15

Law-making at the intersection of international environmental, humanitarian and criminal law: the issue of damage to the environment in international armed conflict
Julian Wyatt
International Review of the Red Cross
Volume 92, Number 879, September 2010 p.593-646

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16

Selected Article on International Humanitarian Law Collective reparation for victims of armed conflict
Friedrich Rosenfeld
International Review of the Red Cross
Volume 92, Number 879, September 2010 p.731-746

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Conclusion

Notes

See Also

References and Further Reading

About the Author/s and Reviewer/s

Author: international

Mentioned in these Entries

Development International Law -8, Geneva Conventions Part 3, Geneva Conventions, International Criminal Law. Bibliography, International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia, International Humanitarian Law Part 2, International Humanitarian Law Part 20, International Humanitarian Law Part 21, International Humanitarian Law Part 22, International Humanitarian Law Part 23, International Humanitarian Law Part 24, International Humanitarian Law Part 3, International Humanitarian Law Part 4, International Humanitarian Law Part 5, International Humanitarian Law Part 6, International Humanitarian Law Part 7, International Humanitarian Law Part 8, International Humanitarian Law Part 9, International Humanitarian Law, International Humanitarian Law0, International Humanitarian Law1, International Humanitarian Law2, International Humanitarian Law3, International Humanitarian Law4, International Humanitarian Law5, International Humanitarian Law6, International Humanitarian Law7, International Humanitarian Law8, International Humanitarian Law9, International human rights law Part 20, International human rights law Part 7, International human rights law8, International humanitarian law Part 2, International humanitarian law Part 20, International humanitarian law Part 21, International humanitarian law Part 22, International humanitarian law Part 3, International humanitarian law Part 4, International humanitarian law Part 5, International humanitarian law Part 6, International humanitarian law Part 7, International humanitarian law Part 8, International humanitarian law Part 9, International humanitarian law, International humanitarian law, International humanitarian law0, International humanitarian law1, International humanitarian law2, International humanitarian law3, International humanitarian law4, International humanitarian law5, International humanitarian law6, International humanitarian law7, International humanitarian law8, International humanitarian law9, International law: the refugee, List of International Humanitarian Treaties and Documents, MPEPIL: International humanitarian law, Prisoners of War Law, Prosecutor v. Kupreskic, Refugees Part 9.

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