The nature of modern armed conflicts, combined with traditional interpretations of proportionality, poses serious challenges to the jus ad bellum goal of limiting and controlling wars. In between the jus ad bellum focus on decisions to use force, and the international humanitarian law (IHL) regulation of specific attacks, there is a far-reaching space in which the regulatory role of international law is bereft of much needed clarity. Perhaps the most striking example is in relation to overall casualties of war. If the jus ad bellum is understood as applying to the opening moments of the conflict, then it cannot provide a solution to growing numbers of casualties later in the conflict. Moreover, if it does not apply to non-international arme...
It is a long-established principle of ‘just war’ theory that military commanders must ri...
The precise scope of the right of self-defence remains a very controversial aspect of jus ad bellum;...
Contrary to the common claim that jus in bello proportionality is an obscure and intractable princi...
The argument of this article is that the proportionality rule in AP–I does express a doctrine that h...
The existence of the principle of proportionality as a norm is undisputed, and military commanders i...
The laws of war are undergoing a fundamental transformation. The first step was the unmooring of the...
The principle of proportionality protects civilians and civilian objects against expected incidental...
Traditionally, international law has established a binary distinction between jus ad bellum and jus ...
Published online on 01 December 2018Military operations are taking place with increasing frequency i...
Proportionality functions as one of the most important legal constraints applicable to the conduct o...
The prohibition of attacks expected to cause incidental loss of civilian life, injury to civilians, ...
The rule on proportionality represents the most apparent manifestation of the balance between milita...
The principle of proportionality is a central feature of international law regulating modern militar...
At a time when the United States has undertaken high-stakes counterinsurgency campaigns in at least ...
In the past, most armed conflicts were international, but today armed conflicts often are non-intern...
It is a long-established principle of ‘just war’ theory that military commanders must ri...
The precise scope of the right of self-defence remains a very controversial aspect of jus ad bellum;...
Contrary to the common claim that jus in bello proportionality is an obscure and intractable princi...
The argument of this article is that the proportionality rule in AP–I does express a doctrine that h...
The existence of the principle of proportionality as a norm is undisputed, and military commanders i...
The laws of war are undergoing a fundamental transformation. The first step was the unmooring of the...
The principle of proportionality protects civilians and civilian objects against expected incidental...
Traditionally, international law has established a binary distinction between jus ad bellum and jus ...
Published online on 01 December 2018Military operations are taking place with increasing frequency i...
Proportionality functions as one of the most important legal constraints applicable to the conduct o...
The prohibition of attacks expected to cause incidental loss of civilian life, injury to civilians, ...
The rule on proportionality represents the most apparent manifestation of the balance between milita...
The principle of proportionality is a central feature of international law regulating modern militar...
At a time when the United States has undertaken high-stakes counterinsurgency campaigns in at least ...
In the past, most armed conflicts were international, but today armed conflicts often are non-intern...
It is a long-established principle of ‘just war’ theory that military commanders must ri...
The precise scope of the right of self-defence remains a very controversial aspect of jus ad bellum;...
Contrary to the common claim that jus in bello proportionality is an obscure and intractable princi...