Aspects of international humanitarian law (IHL) and the international law of armed conflict (LOAC) are out-dated because they are ill-adapted to new battlefields. Some innovation is needed in them to address thc complexities of the networked insurgencies that we see today. War between states has declined in prev alence and importance relative to armed conflicts across societal groups, both within states and acro ss nat ional borders. Private organisation s are likely to dominate armed conflicts for the foreseeable future, including those in the Asia- Pacific and beyond, where Australian expeditiona ry forces are engaged. Often called \u27non-state actors\u27 in the intern ational legal parlance, they typically conduct hostilities through ir...
Military strategists have begun pivoting from a focus on counterterrorism, counter-insurgency and st...
The International Law Association Study Group on the Conduct of Hostilities in the 21st Century was ...
This article tries to imagine how the development of international humanitarian law (IHL) could cont...
Alongside non-international and international conflict, a third category of armed conflict is emergi...
Gone are the days of soldiers facing each other across large battlefields, tanks shelling tanks, and...
This paper will consider how the actual conduct of armed conflict has developed and how the interpre...
The strict division of international humanitarian law into rules applicable in international armed c...
In recent years, armed conflicts have changed in nature (civil war, ‘terrorism’) and the means used ...
States are increasingly involved in violent conflicts with non-state actors. This new situation cha...
War is a ubiquitous and dynamic social phenomenon subject of many international legal rules. Interna...
Most contemporary armed conflicts are not of an international character. International Humanitarian ...
In an era of unrelenting violence, conflict and hostilities resulting in large scale human suffering...
Adjunct Professor Warren Small, Attorney at Law; Adjunct Professor of Law, Golden Gate University Sc...
While a more traditional approach to international law and armed conflict focuses on the use of forc...
The changing nature of warfare in the 21st century poses a multitude of challenges to the perceived ...
Military strategists have begun pivoting from a focus on counterterrorism, counter-insurgency and st...
The International Law Association Study Group on the Conduct of Hostilities in the 21st Century was ...
This article tries to imagine how the development of international humanitarian law (IHL) could cont...
Alongside non-international and international conflict, a third category of armed conflict is emergi...
Gone are the days of soldiers facing each other across large battlefields, tanks shelling tanks, and...
This paper will consider how the actual conduct of armed conflict has developed and how the interpre...
The strict division of international humanitarian law into rules applicable in international armed c...
In recent years, armed conflicts have changed in nature (civil war, ‘terrorism’) and the means used ...
States are increasingly involved in violent conflicts with non-state actors. This new situation cha...
War is a ubiquitous and dynamic social phenomenon subject of many international legal rules. Interna...
Most contemporary armed conflicts are not of an international character. International Humanitarian ...
In an era of unrelenting violence, conflict and hostilities resulting in large scale human suffering...
Adjunct Professor Warren Small, Attorney at Law; Adjunct Professor of Law, Golden Gate University Sc...
While a more traditional approach to international law and armed conflict focuses on the use of forc...
The changing nature of warfare in the 21st century poses a multitude of challenges to the perceived ...
Military strategists have begun pivoting from a focus on counterterrorism, counter-insurgency and st...
The International Law Association Study Group on the Conduct of Hostilities in the 21st Century was ...
This article tries to imagine how the development of international humanitarian law (IHL) could cont...