The purpose of this article is twofold: first, some of the gaps in Convention protections of non-combatants will be identified; and second, possible remedies will be offered. The alleged atrocities at My Lai have exposed one major gap in Convention protection, although surprisingly few popular or scholarly commentators have mentioned or discussed it. The Geneva Civilian Convention does not protect the nationals of a co-belligerent state from the depredations of an ally. The author details the Geneva Convention categories that apply in these situations and offers revisions that could be implemented to provide the laws necessary to protect non-combatants
In this thesis I will research the possibility of the application of the Geneva Conventions to non-i...
The primary focus of attention in discussions on legal norms protecting refugees are usually the 195...
The contemporary propensity for, and risk of, armed conflict taking place among the civilian populat...
The purpose of this article is twofold: first, some of the gaps in Convention protections of non-com...
The motive of every war has always been to actualize socio-economic and political interest. Attendan...
War victim protection is a critical aspect of international humanitarian law, as highlighted by the ...
The following essay is based on the author’s article of the same name in the “Think Again” section o...
This article examines the evolution of international humanitarian law, specifically as it relates to...
This article asserts that Captain David Graham, writing in this issue of the Washington and Lee Law ...
The so-called war on terrorism has prompted calls for revisions to the 1949 Geneva Conventions on ar...
Non-uniformed combat morally infringes on civilians’ fundamental right to immunity and exacts an imp...
Although not generally accorded primary consideration during armed conflict, a vast number of provis...
Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions of 1949 and the interpretation given to it by many in the inter...
This Article attempts to identify and clarify what is genuinely new about the ¿new paradigm¿ of arme...
The purpose of this essay, written in late 2006, is to take stock of the current application of the ...
In this thesis I will research the possibility of the application of the Geneva Conventions to non-i...
The primary focus of attention in discussions on legal norms protecting refugees are usually the 195...
The contemporary propensity for, and risk of, armed conflict taking place among the civilian populat...
The purpose of this article is twofold: first, some of the gaps in Convention protections of non-com...
The motive of every war has always been to actualize socio-economic and political interest. Attendan...
War victim protection is a critical aspect of international humanitarian law, as highlighted by the ...
The following essay is based on the author’s article of the same name in the “Think Again” section o...
This article examines the evolution of international humanitarian law, specifically as it relates to...
This article asserts that Captain David Graham, writing in this issue of the Washington and Lee Law ...
The so-called war on terrorism has prompted calls for revisions to the 1949 Geneva Conventions on ar...
Non-uniformed combat morally infringes on civilians’ fundamental right to immunity and exacts an imp...
Although not generally accorded primary consideration during armed conflict, a vast number of provis...
Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions of 1949 and the interpretation given to it by many in the inter...
This Article attempts to identify and clarify what is genuinely new about the ¿new paradigm¿ of arme...
The purpose of this essay, written in late 2006, is to take stock of the current application of the ...
In this thesis I will research the possibility of the application of the Geneva Conventions to non-i...
The primary focus of attention in discussions on legal norms protecting refugees are usually the 195...
The contemporary propensity for, and risk of, armed conflict taking place among the civilian populat...