Cluster munitions are a serious issue because of the lack of specialized restrictions on their use and the high volume of explosive remnants of war that the weapons can create. Although all weapons are governed by international law, the lack of a specific convention addressing these weapons led many nongovernmental organizations and countries to join together to create a ban in what has become known as the Oslo Process, with the most recent conference held in May 2008 in Dublin
The Convention on Cluster Munitions adopted a number of innovative approaches to victim assistance w...
Unplanned explosions at munitions sites (UEMS) frequently result in contamination and destruction si...
This article describes the initiatives undertaken by the Azerbaijan Campaign to Ban Landmines to con...
Cluster munitions have been used in at least 23 countries, produced in 33 and stockpiled in over 70;...
This article argues for banning the use of cluster munitions by the United States and in general. It...
More than a decade has passed since the monumental Ottawa Mine Ban Convention was opened for signatu...
The Convention on Cluster Munitions bans all use, production, transfer and stockpiling of cluster mu...
Cluster munitions have been a significant weapon in the world\u27s arsenals for the last half-centur...
For some countries affected by cluster munitions, the obligations to demilitarize that accompany rat...
Recent developments regarding the Convention on Cluster Munitions highlight an important shift in th...
"For over sixty years, cluster munitions have caused civilian deaths and injury because of the wide ...
One of the most hopeful new developments in international humanitarian law is embodied in the Conve...
The calls for a new international legal instrument to ban or restrict cluster munitions derive in la...
Little bells refer to cluster bomblets in Serbo-Croatian. Two international tribunals recently have...
On 30 May 2008, the international community adopted the Convention on Cluster Munitions. It is littl...
The Convention on Cluster Munitions adopted a number of innovative approaches to victim assistance w...
Unplanned explosions at munitions sites (UEMS) frequently result in contamination and destruction si...
This article describes the initiatives undertaken by the Azerbaijan Campaign to Ban Landmines to con...
Cluster munitions have been used in at least 23 countries, produced in 33 and stockpiled in over 70;...
This article argues for banning the use of cluster munitions by the United States and in general. It...
More than a decade has passed since the monumental Ottawa Mine Ban Convention was opened for signatu...
The Convention on Cluster Munitions bans all use, production, transfer and stockpiling of cluster mu...
Cluster munitions have been a significant weapon in the world\u27s arsenals for the last half-centur...
For some countries affected by cluster munitions, the obligations to demilitarize that accompany rat...
Recent developments regarding the Convention on Cluster Munitions highlight an important shift in th...
"For over sixty years, cluster munitions have caused civilian deaths and injury because of the wide ...
One of the most hopeful new developments in international humanitarian law is embodied in the Conve...
The calls for a new international legal instrument to ban or restrict cluster munitions derive in la...
Little bells refer to cluster bomblets in Serbo-Croatian. Two international tribunals recently have...
On 30 May 2008, the international community adopted the Convention on Cluster Munitions. It is littl...
The Convention on Cluster Munitions adopted a number of innovative approaches to victim assistance w...
Unplanned explosions at munitions sites (UEMS) frequently result in contamination and destruction si...
This article describes the initiatives undertaken by the Azerbaijan Campaign to Ban Landmines to con...