This article examines the question of command responsibility for war crimes under international and Australian law, and how far such responsibility extends. It uses the results of the Brereton Report, an Australian investigation into alleged crimes committed by its special forces in Afghanistan, as its starting point. While this is very much an Australian case study, the concerns it raises should be of interest to all professional militaries. The article also provides an important case study of the implications when national legal standards adopted for war crimes prosecutions differ from the provisions of international law
This article maps the range of war crimes being committed in Syria with reference to the applicable ...
This article considers the possibility of holding states responsible for wrongful acts committed by ...
Born in the aftermath of the Second World War, the doctrine of command or superior responsibility pr...
The recently released Brereton Inquiry Report found there was credible evidence to suggest a small n...
This article examines the influence and interpretation of international law in Australia's policy an...
Abstract: In Re Civilian Casualty Court Martial, disciplinary charges preferred against two Australi...
The article discusses the potential for prosecutions of Australian Special Forces members for war cr...
This article analyzes Australia’s contribution to the Afghanistan War from 2001 to 2014. It recommen...
There is no statistical report about the war crime committed in Afghanistan from 1978 to 2021. This ...
There is no statistical report about the war crime committed in Afghanistan from 1978- to 2021. This...
Afghanistan has been a war-torn country for the past forty years. Over this time, countless atrociti...
There seems to be little doubt that modern international law embodies the principle that, in additio...
This thesis takes forward the application of the concurrence between individual responsibility and s...
As confident as Byers, Schabas and many others are in their assertion that Canada has committed war ...
This Article explores the substantive and procedural aspects of the assertion that recklessness is i...
This article maps the range of war crimes being committed in Syria with reference to the applicable ...
This article considers the possibility of holding states responsible for wrongful acts committed by ...
Born in the aftermath of the Second World War, the doctrine of command or superior responsibility pr...
The recently released Brereton Inquiry Report found there was credible evidence to suggest a small n...
This article examines the influence and interpretation of international law in Australia's policy an...
Abstract: In Re Civilian Casualty Court Martial, disciplinary charges preferred against two Australi...
The article discusses the potential for prosecutions of Australian Special Forces members for war cr...
This article analyzes Australia’s contribution to the Afghanistan War from 2001 to 2014. It recommen...
There is no statistical report about the war crime committed in Afghanistan from 1978 to 2021. This ...
There is no statistical report about the war crime committed in Afghanistan from 1978- to 2021. This...
Afghanistan has been a war-torn country for the past forty years. Over this time, countless atrociti...
There seems to be little doubt that modern international law embodies the principle that, in additio...
This thesis takes forward the application of the concurrence between individual responsibility and s...
As confident as Byers, Schabas and many others are in their assertion that Canada has committed war ...
This Article explores the substantive and procedural aspects of the assertion that recklessness is i...
This article maps the range of war crimes being committed in Syria with reference to the applicable ...
This article considers the possibility of holding states responsible for wrongful acts committed by ...
Born in the aftermath of the Second World War, the doctrine of command or superior responsibility pr...