Contemporary Challenges to the Laws of War
Essays in Honour of Professor Peter Rowe
Herausgeber: Harvey, Caroline; White, Nigel D; Summers, James
Contemporary Challenges to the Laws of War
Essays in Honour of Professor Peter Rowe
Herausgeber: Harvey, Caroline; White, Nigel D; Summers, James
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This book brings together leading experts to explore contemporary issues facing the laws of war.
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This book brings together leading experts to explore contemporary issues facing the laws of war.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 396
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Oktober 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 680g
- ISBN-13: 9781107063556
- ISBN-10: 1107063558
- Artikelnr.: 41216831
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 396
- Erscheinungstermin: 16. Oktober 2014
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 28mm
- Gewicht: 680g
- ISBN-13: 9781107063556
- ISBN-10: 1107063558
- Artikelnr.: 41216831
Foreword Christopher Greenwood; Preface Caroline Harvey, James Summers and
Nigel D. White; 1. Introduction James Summers; 2. Army legal services and
academia A. P. V. Rogers and Gordon Risius; Part I. Structural and Systemic
Aspects of the Laws of War: 3. Development of new rules or application of
more than one legal regime? Dieter Fleck; 4. It's a bird! It's a plane!
It's a non-international armed conflict: cross border hostilities between
states and non-state actors Lindsay Moir; 5. Security Council mandates and
the use of lethal force by peacekeepers: what place for the laws of war?
Nigel D. White; 6. The relationship of international humanitarian law and
war crimes: international criminal tribunals and their statutes Robert
Cryer; Part II. Effective Protection?: 7. The future of Article 5 tribunals
in the light of experiences in the Iraq war, 2003 Nicholas Mercer; 8.
Direct participation and the principle of distinction: squaring the circle
Charles Garraway; 9. Droning on: some international humanitarian law
aspects of the use of unmanned aerial vehicles in contemporary armed
conflicts David Turns; 10. Does the law of targeting meet
twenty-first-century needs? William Boothby; 11. Protecting civilians from
the effects of explosive weapons in International Humanitarian Law Maya
Brehm; 12. The International Committee of the Red Cross and the initiative
to strengthen legal protection for victims of armed conflicts Michael
Meyer; Part III. Responsibility and Accountability: 13. Corporate criminal
responsibility for war crimes and other violations of international
humanitarian law: the impact of the business and human rights movement Alex
Batesmith; 14. The trial of prisoners of war by military courts in modern
armed conflicts Peter Rowe; 15. The right to conduct one's own defence
before the ICTY and a fair and expeditious trial: an impossible balancing
act Caroline Harvey.
Nigel D. White; 1. Introduction James Summers; 2. Army legal services and
academia A. P. V. Rogers and Gordon Risius; Part I. Structural and Systemic
Aspects of the Laws of War: 3. Development of new rules or application of
more than one legal regime? Dieter Fleck; 4. It's a bird! It's a plane!
It's a non-international armed conflict: cross border hostilities between
states and non-state actors Lindsay Moir; 5. Security Council mandates and
the use of lethal force by peacekeepers: what place for the laws of war?
Nigel D. White; 6. The relationship of international humanitarian law and
war crimes: international criminal tribunals and their statutes Robert
Cryer; Part II. Effective Protection?: 7. The future of Article 5 tribunals
in the light of experiences in the Iraq war, 2003 Nicholas Mercer; 8.
Direct participation and the principle of distinction: squaring the circle
Charles Garraway; 9. Droning on: some international humanitarian law
aspects of the use of unmanned aerial vehicles in contemporary armed
conflicts David Turns; 10. Does the law of targeting meet
twenty-first-century needs? William Boothby; 11. Protecting civilians from
the effects of explosive weapons in International Humanitarian Law Maya
Brehm; 12. The International Committee of the Red Cross and the initiative
to strengthen legal protection for victims of armed conflicts Michael
Meyer; Part III. Responsibility and Accountability: 13. Corporate criminal
responsibility for war crimes and other violations of international
humanitarian law: the impact of the business and human rights movement Alex
Batesmith; 14. The trial of prisoners of war by military courts in modern
armed conflicts Peter Rowe; 15. The right to conduct one's own defence
before the ICTY and a fair and expeditious trial: an impossible balancing
act Caroline Harvey.
Foreword Christopher Greenwood; Preface Caroline Harvey, James Summers and
Nigel D. White; 1. Introduction James Summers; 2. Army legal services and
academia A. P. V. Rogers and Gordon Risius; Part I. Structural and Systemic
Aspects of the Laws of War: 3. Development of new rules or application of
more than one legal regime? Dieter Fleck; 4. It's a bird! It's a plane!
It's a non-international armed conflict: cross border hostilities between
states and non-state actors Lindsay Moir; 5. Security Council mandates and
the use of lethal force by peacekeepers: what place for the laws of war?
Nigel D. White; 6. The relationship of international humanitarian law and
war crimes: international criminal tribunals and their statutes Robert
Cryer; Part II. Effective Protection?: 7. The future of Article 5 tribunals
in the light of experiences in the Iraq war, 2003 Nicholas Mercer; 8.
Direct participation and the principle of distinction: squaring the circle
Charles Garraway; 9. Droning on: some international humanitarian law
aspects of the use of unmanned aerial vehicles in contemporary armed
conflicts David Turns; 10. Does the law of targeting meet
twenty-first-century needs? William Boothby; 11. Protecting civilians from
the effects of explosive weapons in International Humanitarian Law Maya
Brehm; 12. The International Committee of the Red Cross and the initiative
to strengthen legal protection for victims of armed conflicts Michael
Meyer; Part III. Responsibility and Accountability: 13. Corporate criminal
responsibility for war crimes and other violations of international
humanitarian law: the impact of the business and human rights movement Alex
Batesmith; 14. The trial of prisoners of war by military courts in modern
armed conflicts Peter Rowe; 15. The right to conduct one's own defence
before the ICTY and a fair and expeditious trial: an impossible balancing
act Caroline Harvey.
Nigel D. White; 1. Introduction James Summers; 2. Army legal services and
academia A. P. V. Rogers and Gordon Risius; Part I. Structural and Systemic
Aspects of the Laws of War: 3. Development of new rules or application of
more than one legal regime? Dieter Fleck; 4. It's a bird! It's a plane!
It's a non-international armed conflict: cross border hostilities between
states and non-state actors Lindsay Moir; 5. Security Council mandates and
the use of lethal force by peacekeepers: what place for the laws of war?
Nigel D. White; 6. The relationship of international humanitarian law and
war crimes: international criminal tribunals and their statutes Robert
Cryer; Part II. Effective Protection?: 7. The future of Article 5 tribunals
in the light of experiences in the Iraq war, 2003 Nicholas Mercer; 8.
Direct participation and the principle of distinction: squaring the circle
Charles Garraway; 9. Droning on: some international humanitarian law
aspects of the use of unmanned aerial vehicles in contemporary armed
conflicts David Turns; 10. Does the law of targeting meet
twenty-first-century needs? William Boothby; 11. Protecting civilians from
the effects of explosive weapons in International Humanitarian Law Maya
Brehm; 12. The International Committee of the Red Cross and the initiative
to strengthen legal protection for victims of armed conflicts Michael
Meyer; Part III. Responsibility and Accountability: 13. Corporate criminal
responsibility for war crimes and other violations of international
humanitarian law: the impact of the business and human rights movement Alex
Batesmith; 14. The trial of prisoners of war by military courts in modern
armed conflicts Peter Rowe; 15. The right to conduct one's own defence
before the ICTY and a fair and expeditious trial: an impossible balancing
act Caroline Harvey.