Animals in the International Law of Armed Conflict
Robert Kolb editor Anne Peters editor Jérôme de Hemptinne editor
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:6th Oct '22
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Raises the novel legal question of animals during warfare, highlighting deficiencies in current practice and suggesting new readings and reforms.
Wildlife and domestic animals are the neglected victims of armed conflicts. The book is the first to analyse how inadequately international law protects animals and how international humanitarian law principles and concepts can be interpreted and reformed to improve the legal protection of animals, including with adapted enforcement mechanisms.Animals are the unknown victims of armed conflicts. Wildlife populations usually decline during warfare, with disastrous repercussions on the food chain, on fragile ecosystems and precarious habitats. Belligerents take advantage of the chaos of war for poaching and trafficking of animal products. Livestock, companion, and zoo animals, highly dependent on human care, are direct victims of hostilities. The book is the first legal analysis of these issues. It maps the framework of international humanitarian law, examining which and how the concepts, principles, and rationales can be applied and adapted for a better protection of animals. The contributions inter alia discuss precautions for animal civilians, problems of animal combatants and prisoners, a specific status for veterinarian personnel, the recognition of biodiversity hotspots as specially protected zones, and the potential of enforcement mechanisms. The concluding chapter draws together novel interpretations and reform proposals.
ISBN: 9781316512043
Dimensions: 235mm x 159mm x 28mm
Weight: 780g
376 pages