Inducing Compliance with International Humanitarian Law
Lessons from the African Great Lakes Region
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:13th Dec '18
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- Hardback£135.00(9781107102057)
Evaluates various means of inducing compliance with international humanitarian law by state and non-state actors.
This book explores and evaluates methods for inducing compliance with international humanitarian law, by both states and non-state actors, including armed groups, NGOs and the UN Security Council. The authors examine what lessons can be learned in particular from the African Great Lakes region.The number of armed conflicts featuring extreme violence against the civilian population in areas with no or little state authority has risen significantly since the early 1990s. This phenomenon has been particularly prevalent in the African Great Lakes Region. This collection of essays evaluates, from an interdisciplinary perspective, the various traditional and alternative instruments for inducing compliance with international humanitarian law. In particular, it explores the potential of persuasion, as well as hierarchical means such as criminal justice on the international and domestic level or quasi-judicial mechanisms by armed groups. Furthermore, it evaluates the role and potential of human rights bodies, peacekeeping missions and the UN Security Council's special compliance system for children and armed conflicts. It also considers how Common Article 1 to the Geneva Conventions and the law of state responsibility could both potentially increase compliance with international humanitarian law.
ISBN: 9781107499560
Dimensions: 230mm x 152mm x 28mm
Weight: 820g
575 pages