Human Rights Watch was one of the six non-governmental organizations (NGOs) that initiated the International Campaign to Ban Land Mines in 1992. The Campaign calls for a comprehensive international ban on the production, stockpiling, trade and use of antipersonnel land mines. It also calls for increased international resources for mine clearance and victim assistance programs
Geneva Call has been engaging armed non-state actors in a landmine ban since 2000. The Swiss-based n...
Landmines: A Deadly Legacy (“ Deadly Legacy”) is both a powerful advocacy piece calling for an inter...
This paper is a comparative analysis of the international campaigns around landmines and small arms....
Antipersonnel land mines are among the deadliest and most insidious weapons in the world today: thei...
Antipersonnel (A/P) land mines are devastating weapons not only during, but also after, warfare or a...
The Convention on Conventional Weapons was adopted in 1980 to limit the use of conventional weapons ...
Anti-personnel (AP) landmines have historically been used as a military tool. The humanitarian conse...
The number of antipersonnel landmines worldwide has increased dramatically in the last twenty-five y...
The goal of the Mine Ban Treaty (1997) can’t be clearer: a landmine free world and a safe environmen...
Armed non-state actors are currently involved as fighting parties in conflicts all over the world; h...
This article examines the role NGOs have played in placing and controlling the landmineban issue on ...
This collaborative research focused on three separate projects. “Has the Mine Ban Treaty Failed? Th...
In spite of the peace accord signed in October 1992 between government forces and RENAMO rebels, inn...
Since the launch of the first-ever civilian mine action operations in Afghanistan in 1988, significa...
Anti-personnel mines have evolved into the military device of choice in many regional conflicts acro...
Geneva Call has been engaging armed non-state actors in a landmine ban since 2000. The Swiss-based n...
Landmines: A Deadly Legacy (“ Deadly Legacy”) is both a powerful advocacy piece calling for an inter...
This paper is a comparative analysis of the international campaigns around landmines and small arms....
Antipersonnel land mines are among the deadliest and most insidious weapons in the world today: thei...
Antipersonnel (A/P) land mines are devastating weapons not only during, but also after, warfare or a...
The Convention on Conventional Weapons was adopted in 1980 to limit the use of conventional weapons ...
Anti-personnel (AP) landmines have historically been used as a military tool. The humanitarian conse...
The number of antipersonnel landmines worldwide has increased dramatically in the last twenty-five y...
The goal of the Mine Ban Treaty (1997) can’t be clearer: a landmine free world and a safe environmen...
Armed non-state actors are currently involved as fighting parties in conflicts all over the world; h...
This article examines the role NGOs have played in placing and controlling the landmineban issue on ...
This collaborative research focused on three separate projects. “Has the Mine Ban Treaty Failed? Th...
In spite of the peace accord signed in October 1992 between government forces and RENAMO rebels, inn...
Since the launch of the first-ever civilian mine action operations in Afghanistan in 1988, significa...
Anti-personnel mines have evolved into the military device of choice in many regional conflicts acro...
Geneva Call has been engaging armed non-state actors in a landmine ban since 2000. The Swiss-based n...
Landmines: A Deadly Legacy (“ Deadly Legacy”) is both a powerful advocacy piece calling for an inter...
This paper is a comparative analysis of the international campaigns around landmines and small arms....