The obligation to respect and ensure respect is codified by common Article 1 of the Geneva Conventions and in Article 1(1) of Additional Protocol I. The following research essay shall consider the second portion of this obligation, that is the obligation to ensure respect, and in particular the responsibilities of third States observing conflicts to which they are not a party. There are two competing interpretations of this obligation. One interpretation, favoured by the International Committee of the Red Cross in their 2016 Updated Commentary, requires that States are required to adopt all appropriate measures to ensure that International Humanitarian Law is observed universally. An alternate interpretation promotes a far more restricted i...
The question about possible remedies, including military intervention, to avoid or to put an end to ...
As a response to massive human rights disasters that took place in the 1990s, such as those in Bosni...
This paper seeks to clarify the confusions regarding the relationships between international human r...
The obligation to respect and ensure respect is codified by common Article 1 of the Geneva Conventio...
This article disputes what seems to have become the dominant interpretation of the obligation to res...
International Humanitarian Law is considered as a legal regime whose governing rules are being cha...
Common Article 1 (common to the Geneva Conventions of August 1949 and their Additional Protocols I a...
Despite its brevity, common article 1 of the Geneva Conventions and their Additional Protocols revea...
Protecting civilians in armed conflicts represents one of the main goals of international humanitari...
The four Geneva Conventions 1 and the two Additional Protocols of 1977 2 generally lack authoritativ...
This article considers whether, in the context of armed conflicts, certain non-refoulement obligatio...
Internal armed conflicts are today the more common mode of warfare and a growing concern for the int...
The emergence of the concept of R2P has been characterized as the most dramatic and rapid normative ...
In Syria, the United States is training and equipping non-state groups to battle ISIS. In Eastern ...
The responsibility to protect, from its recent nativity in the 2001 report of the International Comm...
The question about possible remedies, including military intervention, to avoid or to put an end to ...
As a response to massive human rights disasters that took place in the 1990s, such as those in Bosni...
This paper seeks to clarify the confusions regarding the relationships between international human r...
The obligation to respect and ensure respect is codified by common Article 1 of the Geneva Conventio...
This article disputes what seems to have become the dominant interpretation of the obligation to res...
International Humanitarian Law is considered as a legal regime whose governing rules are being cha...
Common Article 1 (common to the Geneva Conventions of August 1949 and their Additional Protocols I a...
Despite its brevity, common article 1 of the Geneva Conventions and their Additional Protocols revea...
Protecting civilians in armed conflicts represents one of the main goals of international humanitari...
The four Geneva Conventions 1 and the two Additional Protocols of 1977 2 generally lack authoritativ...
This article considers whether, in the context of armed conflicts, certain non-refoulement obligatio...
Internal armed conflicts are today the more common mode of warfare and a growing concern for the int...
The emergence of the concept of R2P has been characterized as the most dramatic and rapid normative ...
In Syria, the United States is training and equipping non-state groups to battle ISIS. In Eastern ...
The responsibility to protect, from its recent nativity in the 2001 report of the International Comm...
The question about possible remedies, including military intervention, to avoid or to put an end to ...
As a response to massive human rights disasters that took place in the 1990s, such as those in Bosni...
This paper seeks to clarify the confusions regarding the relationships between international human r...