How Does Law Protect in War?: Cases, Documents, and Teaching Materials on Contemporary Practice in International Humanitarian LawInternational Committee of the Red Cross, 1999 - Combatants and noncombatants (International law). - 1492 pages Comparison of the Legal Regimes for International and for Non-International |
Contents
V | 65 |
VII | 84 |
c International Humanitarian Law is applicable independently | 87 |
Copyright | |
155 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accordance acts Additional Protocol agreement Annex anti-personnel mines armed forces Article attack belligerent chemical weapons civilian population combatants Commission committed common concerned Conference constitute Court criminal Cross and Red customary international law customary law defence Document droit emblem enemy ensure extradition Former Yugoslavia Fourth Geneva Convention FURTHER READING Geneva Conventions Government grave breaches Hague Convention Hague Regulations Henry Dunant High Contracting Parties hostilities ICRC ICTY implementation internally displaced internally displaced persons international armed conflicts International Committee International Criminal Court International Humanitarian Law IRRC Israel Israeli jurisdiction law of war legislation military objectives Military Tribunal National Societies neutral non-international armed conflicts nuclear weapons obligation occupied territory occupying power operations organizations paragraph paras personnel petitioner political principles prisoners prisoners of war prohibited Prosecutor protected persons Protocol II punishment Report respect responsibility status SUGGESTED READING treaties United Nations victims violations violence war crimes warfare