This volume is the first of two addressing the legal regime governing the use of force during armed conflicts. Traditionally labeled 'Hague Law', today the norms it examines are commonly referred to as 'conduct of hostilities rules'. At the heart of this body of law is the principle of distinction, which requires that civilians and civilian objects be distinguished from combatants and military objectives during military operations. It is the purest expression of the foundational balance between humanitarian considerations and military necessity that has underpinned international humanitarian law since its inception. The essays selected consider the theoretical and practical difficulties of maintaining the balance in the face of evolving mea...
In the paper works of many authors dealing with the rules which regulate the relationships between t...
This study analyzes the role and function of the rules on the use of force for military operations i...
This is the text of a lecture, presented by Professor Yoram Dinstein at Tilburg University, outlinin...
The essays selected for this second volume on the conduct of hostilities examine discrete topics of ...
The essays selected for the first part of this volume offer an insight into the development, as dist...
A contemporary examination of the principle of distinction in international humanitarian law Abstrac...
The article addresses the issue of international legal grounds of prohibiting usage of certain metho...
Part I: The principle of distinction; Part II Specifically protected persons andobjects; Part III: S...
The strict division of international humanitarian law into rules applicable in international armed c...
This dissertation examines the problem of the mistaken killing of civilians in armed conflict. This ...
The concept of military necessity is of fundamental importance for International Humanitarian Law (I...
Most conflicts today are asymmetric, meaning that the parties differ in terms of qualitative and qua...
Part I presents International Humanitarian Law (IHL) carefully and systematically. The important and...
The International Law Association Study Group on the Conduct of Hostilities in the 21st Century was ...
This article focuses on the law which applies during armed conflicts to aerial bombardments or missi...
In the paper works of many authors dealing with the rules which regulate the relationships between t...
This study analyzes the role and function of the rules on the use of force for military operations i...
This is the text of a lecture, presented by Professor Yoram Dinstein at Tilburg University, outlinin...
The essays selected for this second volume on the conduct of hostilities examine discrete topics of ...
The essays selected for the first part of this volume offer an insight into the development, as dist...
A contemporary examination of the principle of distinction in international humanitarian law Abstrac...
The article addresses the issue of international legal grounds of prohibiting usage of certain metho...
Part I: The principle of distinction; Part II Specifically protected persons andobjects; Part III: S...
The strict division of international humanitarian law into rules applicable in international armed c...
This dissertation examines the problem of the mistaken killing of civilians in armed conflict. This ...
The concept of military necessity is of fundamental importance for International Humanitarian Law (I...
Most conflicts today are asymmetric, meaning that the parties differ in terms of qualitative and qua...
Part I presents International Humanitarian Law (IHL) carefully and systematically. The important and...
The International Law Association Study Group on the Conduct of Hostilities in the 21st Century was ...
This article focuses on the law which applies during armed conflicts to aerial bombardments or missi...
In the paper works of many authors dealing with the rules which regulate the relationships between t...
This study analyzes the role and function of the rules on the use of force for military operations i...
This is the text of a lecture, presented by Professor Yoram Dinstein at Tilburg University, outlinin...