new publications in international humanitarian law and on ... · yahli shereshevsky, “targeting...

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New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee of the Red Cross Behaviour of combatants/military ethics Books Amelia Hoover Green, The Commanders Dilemma: Violence and Restraint in Wartime, Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY, and London, 2018, 256 + xiv pp. ICRC, The Roots of Restraint in War [Executive Summary], Geneva, June 2018, 7 pp. George Lucas (ed.), Routledge Handbook of Military Ethics, Routledge, London and New York, 2015, 449 + xxvi pp. Robert Remacle and Pauline Warnotte, La psychologie du combattant et le respect du BOOKS AND ARTICLES ICRC Library The Library of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) welcomes researchers interested in international humanitarian law (IHL) and the institutions work throughout the years. Its online catalogue is the gateway to the most recent scholarship on the subject, documents of Diplomatic and International Conferences, all ICRC publications, rare documents published between the founding of the ICRC and the end of the First World War, and a unique collection of military manuals. The Library Team also publishes research guides in order to help researchers access the full text of the most relevant and reliable sources in the field of IHL and the ICRC.* * The online catalogue is available at: library.icrc.org. For the most recent publications, see: https://tinyurl. com/y27cxjev. For more information on the research guides, see: blogs.icrc.org/cross-files/category/ research-guide. International Review of the Red Cross (2019), 101 (1), 389424. Memory and war doi:10.1017/S1816383119000444 © icrc 2019 389

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Page 1: New publications in international humanitarian law and on ... · Yahli Shereshevsky, “Targeting the Targeted Killings Case: International Lawmaking in Domestic Contexts”, Michigan

New publications in internationalhumanitarian law and on theInternational Committee of the RedCross

Behaviour of combatants/military ethics

Books

Amelia Hoover Green, TheCommander’s Dilemma: Violenceand Restraint in Wartime, CornellUniversity Press, Ithaca, NY, andLondon, 2018, 256 + xiv pp.

ICRC, The Roots of Restraintin War [Executive Summary],Geneva, June 2018, 7 pp.

George Lucas (ed.), RoutledgeHandbook of Military Ethics,Routledge, London andNew York, 2015, 449 + xxvi pp.

Robert Remacle and PaulineWarnotte, La psychologie ducombattant et le respect du

BOOKS AND ARTICLES

ICRC Library

The Library of the International Committee ofthe Red Cross (ICRC) welcomes researchersinterested in international humanitarian law(IHL) and the institution’s work throughoutthe years. Its online catalogue is the gatewayto the most recent scholarship on the subject,documents of Diplomatic and InternationalConferences, all ICRC publications, raredocuments published between the foundingof the ICRC and the end of the First WorldWar, and a unique collection of militarymanuals. The Library Team also publishesresearch guides in order to help researchersaccess the full text of the most relevant andreliable sources in the field of IHL and theICRC.*

* The online catalogue is available at: library.icrc.org. For the most recent publications, see: https://tinyurl.com/y27cxjev. For more information on the research guides, see: blogs.icrc.org/cross-files/category/research-guide.

International Review of the Red Cross (2019), 101 (1), 389–424.Memory and wardoi:10.1017/S1816383119000444

© icrc 2019 389

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droit des conflits armés: Étude des facteurs criminogènes pouvant influencer lecomportement du combattant au regard du droit international humanitaire,Presses Universitaires de Namur, Namur, 2018, 209 pp.

Fiona Terry and Brian McQuinn, Contenir la violence dans la guerre: Les sourcesd’influence chez le combattant, ICRC, Geneva, November 2018, 82 pp. (Frenchversion); ICRC, Beijing, 2018, 74 pp. (Chinese version).

Fiona Terry and BrianMcQuinn, The Roots of Restraint inWar, ICRC, Geneva, June2018, 74 pp.

Civilians and persons hors de combat

Books

Shaheed Fatima et al., Protecting Children in Armed Conflict, Hart, Oxford, 2018,535 + lxiii pp.

Norman G. Finkelstein, Gaza: An Inquest into Its Martyrdom, University ofCalifornia Press, Oakland, CA, 2018, 419 + xv pp.

Mark Lattimer and Philippe Sands (eds), The Grey Zone: Civilian Protection betweenHuman Rights and the Laws of War, Hart, Oxford, 2018, 448 + xxvi pp.

Fionnuala Ní Aoláin et al. (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Gender and Conflict,Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2018, 628 + xliv pp.

Yael Stein, Getting Off Scot-free: Israel’s Refusal to Compensate Palestinians forDamages Caused by Its Security Forces, B’Tselem, Jerusalem, February 2017, 52 pp.

Aisling Swaine, Conflict-Related Violence against Women: Transforming Transition,Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2018, 321 + xii pp.

Articles

Harry Aitken, “The Security Council and International Law Enforcement: AKelsenian Perspective on Civilian Protection Peacekeeping Mandates”, Journal ofConflict and Security Law, Vol. 22, No. 3, 2017, pp. 395–432.

Russell Buchan, “The Rule of Surrender in International Humanitarian Law”, IsraelLaw Review, Vol. 51, No. 1, 2018, pp. 3–27.

Miguel Ángel Martín López, “Las personas con discapacidad víctimas de armas deguerra: Avances en el reconocimiento de sus derechos”, Revista Electrónica deEstudios Internacionales, No. 34, December 2017, pp. 1–25.

Books and articles

390

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Michal Luft, “Living in a Legal Vacuum: The Case of Israel’s Legal Positionand Policy towards Gaza Residents”, Israel Law Review, Vol. 51, No. 2, 2018, pp.193–234.

Zainab Mustafa, “Protecting Civilians during Violent Conflict: Challenges Faced byInternational Humanitarian Law”, RSIL Law Review, Vol. 1, No. 1, 2017, pp. 73–83.

Aldo Perez, “In Defense of Concurrent Application: The ILC Draft Articles on theProtection of Persons in the Event of Disasters and International HumanitarianLaw”, Denver Journal of International Law and Policy, Vol. 46, No. 3, 2018, pp.259–288.

Conduct of hostilities

Books

Stuart Casey-Maslen with Steven Haines, Hague Law Interpreted: The Conduct ofHostilities under the Law of Armed Conflict, Hart, Oxford, 2018, 366 + xxxiii pp.

Laurent Gisel (ed.), The Principle of Proportionality in the Rules Governing theConduct of Hostilities under International Humanitarian Law: InternationalExpert Meeting, 22–23 June 2016, Quebec, ICRC, Geneva, August 2018, 81 pp.

Daphné Richemond-Barak, Underground Warfare, Oxford University Press,New York, 2018, 270 + xxii pp.

Frank Witzleben, Gezielte Tötungen: Ein Legitimationsproblem aus völkerrechticherSicht, Logos Verlag Berlin, Berlin, 2016, 222 pp.

Articles

Yutaka Arai-Takahashi, “Unprivileged (Unlawful) Belligerents Captured on aBattlefield and the Geneva Conventions”, Israel Yearbook on Human Rights, Vol.48, 2018, pp. 63–103.

Matilda Arvidsson, “Targeting, Gender, and International Posthumanitarian Lawand Practice: Framing the Question of the Human in International HumanitarianLaw”, Australian Feminist Law Journal, Vol. 44, No. 1, 2018, pp. 9–28.

Ishita Chakrabarty and Hardik Choudhary, “Participation in the Conduct ofHostilities and State Restraint on Killing”, Queen Mary Law Journal, Vol. 9,Spring 2018, pp. 49–66.

Catherine Connolly, “‘Necessity Knows No Law’: The Resurrection of Kriegsraisonthrough the US Targeted Killing Programme”, Journal of Conflict and Security Law,Vol. 22, No. 3, 2017, pp. 463–496.

New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee

of the Red Cross

391

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Geoffrey Corn and Andrew Culliver, “Wounded Combatants, Military MedicalPersonnel, and the Dilemma of Collateral Risk”, Georgia Journal of Internationaland Comparative Law, Vol. 45, No. 3, 2017, pp. 445–473.

Maurice Cotter, “Military Necessity, Proportionality and Dual-Use Objects at theICTY: A Close Reading of the Prlic et al. Proceedings on the Destruction of theOld Bridge of Mostar”, Journal of Conflict and Security Law, Vol. 23, No. 2, 2018,pp. 283–305.

Arne Willy Dahl, “Military Objectives by Nature”, Israel Yearbook on HumanRights, Vol. 48, 2018, pp. 1–17.

E. L. Gaston, “Reconceptualizing Individual or Unit Self-Defense as a CombatantPrivilege”, Harvard National Security Journal, Vol. 8, No. 2, 2017, pp. 283–332.

Scott Graham, “The Non-Combatant Casualty Cut-Off Value: Assessment ofa Novel Targeting Technique in Operation Inherent Resolve”, InternationalCriminal Law Review, Vol. 18, No. 4, 2018, pp. 655–685.

Alexander K. A. Greenawalt, “Targeted Capture”, Harvard International LawJournal, Vol. 59, No. 1, 2018, pp. 1–57.

Jann K. Kleffner, “Military Collaterals and Ius In Bello Proportionality”, IsraelYearbook on Human Rights, Vol. 48, 2018, pp. 43–61.

Ryan T. Krebsbach, “Totality of the Circumstances: The DoD Law of War Manualand the Evolving Notion of Direct Participation in Hostilities”, Journal of NationalSecurity Law and Policy, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2017, pp. 125–157.

Cynthia Marshall, “Civilians with Skin in the Game: The Law of War Manual’sRejection of the ICRC Guidance on Direct Participation in Hostilities”, MilitaryLaw Review, Vol. 225, No. 2, 2017, pp. 259–288.

Noam Neuman, “A Precautionary Tale: The Theory and Practice of Precautions inAttack”, Israel Yearbook on Human Rights, Vol. 48, 2018, pp. 19–41.

Touwendé Roland Ouédraogo, “La distinction entre la participation directe auxhostilités par les civils et la légitime défense des civils”, Revue Québécoise de DroitInternational, Vol. 29, No. 2, 2016, pp. 191–223.

Michael N. Schmitt and Chad E. Highfill, “Invisible Injuries: Concussive Effects andInternational Humanitarian Law”, Harvard National Security Journal, Vol. 9, No. 1,2018, pp. 72–99.

Yahli Shereshevsky, “Targeting the Targeted Killings Case: InternationalLawmaking in Domestic Contexts”, Michigan Journal of International Law, Vol.39, No. 2, 2018, pp. 241–281.

Stephen Townley, “Indiscriminate Attacks and the Past, Present, and Future of theRules/Standards and Objective/Subjective Debates in International HumanitarianLaw”, Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law, Vol. 50, No. 5, 2017, pp. 1223–1279.

Books and articles

392

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Jeroen C. van den Boogaard, “Knock on the Roof: Legitimate Warning or Method ofWarfare?”, Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law, Vol. 19, 2016, pp. 183–209.

Cyber warfare

Books

Sahar Haroon, International Humanitarian Law on Cyberwarfare and Pakistan’sLegal Framework, Research Society of International Law, Islamabad, 2017, 42 + ix pp.

Mariarosaria Taddeo and Ludovica Glorioso (eds), Ethics and Policies for CyberOperations: A NATO Cooperative Cyber Defence Centre of Excellence Initiative,Springer, Cham, 2017, 252 + xvii pp.

Articles

Edward Barrett, “On the Relationship between the Ethics and the Law ofWar: CyberOperations and Sublethal Harm”, Ethics and International Affairs, Vol. 31, No. 4,2017, pp. 467–477.

Stef Blok et al., “Cyber Seminar: Diplomacy and Defense in Cyber Space”, MilitairRechtelijk Tijdschrift, Vol. 111, 2018, 48 pp.

Zen Chang, “Cyberwarfare and International Humanitarian Law”, CreightonInternational and Comparative Law Journal, Vol. 9, No. 1, 2017, pp. 29–53.

Gary Corn et al., “International Law and Cyberspace: Challenges for and by Non-State Actors”, Proceedings of the … Annual Meeting of the American Society ofInternational Law, Vol. 111, 2017, pp. 57–67.

François Delerue, “The Codification of the International Law Applicable toCyber Operations: A Matter for the ILC?”, ESIL Reflections, Vol. 7, No. 4,July 2018, 10 pp.

Dan Efrony and Yuval Shany, “A Rule Book on the Shelf? Tallinn Manual 2.0on Cyberoperations and Subsequent State Practice”, American Journal ofInternational Law, Vol. 112, No. 4, 2018, pp. 583–657.

Eric Talbot Jensen, “The Tallinn Manual 2.0: Highlights and Insights”, GeorgetownJournal of International Law, Vol. 48, No. 3, 2017, pp. 735–778.

David Laton, “Manhattan_Project.exe: A Nuclear Option for the Digital Age”,Catholic University Journal of Law and Technology, Vol. 25, No. 1, 2017, pp. 94–153.

Ana Lenard, “The Nascent Law of Cyber Blockades and Zones”, New ZealandYearbook of International Law, Vol. 14, 2016, pp. 94–133.

New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee

of the Red Cross

393

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Michael N. Schmitt, “Peacetime Cyber Responses and Wartime Cyber Operationsunder International Law: An Analytical Vade Mecum”, Harvard NationalSecurity Journal, Vol. 8, No. 2, 2017, pp. 239–282.

James Emory Tucker, “The Targeting of Non-State-Affiliated Civilians inCyberspace: Lagging LOAC Principles Cause Uncertainty on Both Sides”, NorthCarolina Journal of International Law, Vol. 42, No. 4, 2017, pp. 1013–1059.

Displaced persons/refugees/migrants/stateless persons

Books

David James Cantor, Returns of Internally Displaced Persons during Armed Conflict:International Law and Its Application in Colombia, Brill Nijhoff, Leiden and Boston,MA, 2018, 651 + xxii pp.

ICRC, Addressing Internal Displacement in Times of Armed Conflict and OtherViolence, Geneva, January 2018, 21 pp. (English version); Geneva, February 2018,21 pp. (French version).

ICRC, Displaced in Cities: Experiencing and Responding to Urban InternalDisplacement Outside Camps, Geneva, July 2018, 83 pp.

Elena Katselli Proukaki (ed.), Armed Conflict and Forcible Displacement: IndividualRights under International Law, Routledge, London and New York, 2018, 267 +xxvi pp.

Grégory Tuban, Camps d’étrangers: Le contrôle des réfugiés venus d’Espagne (1939–1944), Nouveau Monde, Paris, 2018, 375 pp.

Articles

Améyo Délali Kouassi, “La protection internationale des personnes déplacées dansles conflits armés: Quelques observations autour de la pratique de la Coureuropéenne des droits de l’homme”, Revue Générale de Droit InternationalPublic, Vol. 121, No. 4, 2017, pp. 1013–1030.

Nina Schrepfer, “Protection in Practice: Protecting IDPs in Today’s ArmedConflicts”, International Journal of Refugee Law, Vol. 30, No. 2, 2018, pp. 292–306.

Miriam Ticktin, “Thinking Beyond Humanitarian Borders”, Social Research, Vol.83, No. 2, Summer 2016, pp. 255–271.

Charlotte Verrier, “L’obtention du statut de réfugié sous la directive 2004/83/CEpour les déserteurs: Un parcours du combattant? Un commentaire de l’arrêtShepherd de la Cour de justice de l’Union Européenne”, Revue Belge de Droit

Books and articles

394

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International/Belgian Review of International Law/Belgisch Tijdschrift voorInternationaal Recht, Vol. 49, No. 2016-2, 2016, pp. 635–659.

Fundamental guarantees

Books

Anke Biehler, Das Vergewaltigungsverbot im bewaffneten Konflikt: Entwicklung,Definition und Durchsetzung, Duncker und Humblot, Berlin, 2017, 353 pp.

Richard Carver and Lisa Handley, Does Torture Prevention Work?, LiverpoolUniversity Press, Liverpool, 2016, 662 + xxvi pp.

Kerry F. Crawford, Wartime Sexual Violence: From Silence to Condemnation of aWeapon of War, Georgetown University Press, Washington, DC, 2017, 214 + x pp.

Manfred Nowak, Torture: an Expert’s Confrontation with an Everyday Evil,University of Pennsylvania Press, Philadelphia, PA, 2018, 199 + vi pp.

Caterina E. Arrabal Ward, Wartime Sexual Violence at the International Level: ALegal Perspective, Brill Nijhoff, Leiden, 2018, 262 + vii pp.

Marysia Zalewski et al. (eds), Sexual Violence against Men in Global Politics,Routledge, London and New York, 2018, 262 + xiv pp.

Articles

David Sverdlov, “Rape in War: Prosecuting the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levantand Boko Haram for Sexual Violence against Women”, Cornell International LawJournal, Vol. 50, No. 2, 2017, pp. 333–359.

History of the ICRC

Books

Maria Grazia Baccolo et al., Le souvenir de Solférino: Aube de l’ère humanitaire,Société Henry Dunant, Geneva, and Ed. Georg, Chêne-Bourg, 2018, 275 pp.

Miriam Baumeister, Thomas Brückner and Patrick Sonnack, Wo liegt die“Humanitäre Schweiz”? Eine Spurensuche in 10 Episoden, Campus, Frankfurt amMain and New York, 2018, 241 pp.

Fatima Besnaci-Lancou, Prisons et camps d’internement en Algérie: Les missions duComité international de la Croix-Rouge (CICR) dans la guerre d’indépendance 1955–1962, Ed. du Croquant, Vulaines-sur-Seine, 2018, 567 pp.

New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee

of the Red Cross

395

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François Bugnion, Face à l’enfer des tranchées: Le Comité international de laCroix-Rougeet la Première Guerre mondiale: 1914–1922, ICRC, Geneva, October 2018, 179 pp.

Marie-Luce Desgrandchamps, L’humanitaire en guerre civile: La crise du Biafra(1967–1970), Presses Universitaires de Rennes, Rennes, 2018, 369 pp.

André Durand, Storia del Comitato Internazionale della Croce Rossa: Da Sarajevo aHiroshima, trans. Antonio Licciulli, Tassinari, Florence, 2016, 582 + x pp.

Charlotte Falcy, La mission humanitaire sur les ondes: Enjeux de l’exploitation de laradiophonique au service du CICR, June 2017, 117 pp.

Irène Herrmann, L’humanitaire en questions: Réflexions autour de l’histoire duComité international de la Croix-Rouge, Ed. du Cerf, Paris, 2018, 171 pp.

Françoise Perret and François Bugnion, L’action du Comité international de laCroix-Rouge durant la guerre d’Algérie (1954–1962), Délégation du CICR, Algiers,August 2015, 110 pp.

Antoine Perriard, La mission du CICR dans les territoires occupés au regard du Sinaïet de la question bédouine (1967–1 973), 2018, 137 pp.

Catherine Rey-Schyrr, History of the International Committee of the Red Cross,Vol. 3: From Yalta to Dien Bien Phu 1945 to 1955, ICRC, Geneva, January 2017,678 + xxiv pp.

Mie Vestergaard, Do Not Show the Scars: The International Committee of the RedCross in the Humanitarian Theatre of Biafra 1967–70, 2017, 311 pp.

Articles

Isabella Cecilian and Barbara Pennazzato, “1859, l’origine di un’idea: La CroceRossa”, Atti della Fondazione Giorgio Ronchi, Vol. 72, No. 1, 2017, 35 pp.

Marie-Luce Desgrandchamps, “Le Biafra et le mythe du nouvel ordre humanitaire”,Campus: le Magazine Scientifique de l’Université de Genève, No. 134, September2018, pp. 28–33.

David P. Forsythe, “The International Red Cross: Decentralization and Its Effects”,Human Rights Quarterly, Vol. 40, No. 1, 2018, pp. 61–90.

Irène Herrmann, “‘L’humanitaire, c’est de la solidarité qui divise’”, Campus: LeMagazine Scientifique de l’Université de Genève, No. 134, September 2018, pp. 22–26.

Raimonda Ottaviani, “Cura e traduzione del verbale originale della Conferenza diGinevra del 26–27–28–29 ottobre 1863”, Atti della Fondazione Giorgio Ronchi,Vol. 72, No. 3, 2017, pp. 273–346.

Daniel Palmieri, “Le doigt dans l’engrenage: Le CICR, Israël et les Territoiresoccupés, 1967–1975”, Schweizerische Zeitschrift für Geschichte/Revue Suissed’Histoire/Rivista Storica Svizzera, Vol. 67, No. 3, 2017, pp. 420–439.

Books and articles

396

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Isabelle Vonèche Cardia, “Les raisons du silence du Comité international de laCroix-Rouge (CICR) face aux déportations”, Revue d’Histoire de la Shoah, No.203, No. 2015/2, 2015, pp. 87–122.

Humanitarian relief

Books

Jean-Hervé Bradol and Marc Le Pape, Génocide et crimes de masse: L’expériencerwandaise de MSF, 1982–1997. CNRS, Paris, 2017, 277 pp.

Alice Debarre, Safeguarding Medical Care and Humanitarian Action in the UNCounterterrorism Framework, International Peace Institute, New York, September2018, 33 + iii pp.

Articles

Dapo Akande and Emanuela-Chiara Gillard, “Promoting Compliance with theRules Regulating Humanitarian Relief Operations in Armed Conflict: SomeChallenges”, Israel Law Review, Vol. 50, No. 2, 2017, pp. 119–137.

Michael Barnett, “Human Rights, Humanitarianism, and the Practices ofHumanity”, International Theory, Vol. 10, No. 3, 2018, pp. 314–349.

Ashley Jonathan Clements, “Overcoming Power Asymmetry in HumanitarianNegotiations with Armed Groups”, International Negotiation, Vol. 23, 2018, pp.367–393.

Jean-Baptiste Michel, “Nigeria: L’agonie en direct du Biafra”, Geohistoire, No. 37,February–March 2018, pp. 58–63.

ICRC activities

Books

ICRC, Annual Report 2017, 2 vols, Geneva, June 2018, 588 pp.

ICRC, Cash Transfer Programming in Armed Conflict: The ICRC’s Experience,Geneva, August 2018, 63 pp. (English version); Beijing, 2018, 63 pp. (Chineseversion).

ICRC, EcoSec Handbook: EcoSec Planning, Monitoring and Evaluation, Geneva,April 2018, 90 pp.

ICRC, Engaging with People Affected by Armed Conflicts and Other Situations ofViolence: Taking Stock, Mapping Trends, Looking Ahead: Recommendations for

New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee

of the Red Cross

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Humanitarian Organizations and Donors in the Digital Era, Geneva, February 2018,90 pp.

ICRC, Humanitarian Logistics and Supply Chain Management: People Suffering inWar Need Your Skills, 4 vols, Geneva, August 2018.

ICRC,Humanity in Action: Annual Review 2017, Geneva, June 2018, 31 pp. (Englishand French versions).

ICRC, Manuel d’anesthésie, Geneva, July 2018, 187 pp.

ICRC, Professional Standards for Protection Work Carried Out by Humanitarianand Human Rights Actors in Armed Conflict and Other Situations of Violence, 3rded., Geneva, February 2018, 158 pp.

ICRC, Professional Standards for Protection Work Carried Out by Humanitarianand Human Rights Actors in Armed Conflict and Other Situations of Violence:2018 Abridged Edition, Geneva, March 2018, 62 pp.

ICRC, Acquiring and Analysing Data in Support of Evidence-Based Decisions: AGuide for Humanitarian Work, Geneva, ICRC, May 2017, 262 pp.

ICRC, EcoSec Handbook: Assessing Economic Security, Geneva, April 2017, 124 pp.(English version); Geneva, October 2017, 123 pp. (French version); Geneva,December 2017, 124 pp. (Spanish version).

ICRC, Passive Security: Technical Guidance for ICRC Premises in the Field, Geneva,December 2017, 94 pp.

ICRC, Physical Rehabilitation Programme: Annual Report 2016, Geneva, November2017, 83 pp.

ICRC, Physiotherapy at the ICRC: Reference Manual, Geneva, May 2017, 81 pp.(English version); Geneva, October 2018, 83 pp. (French version); Cairo, 2017, 81pp. (Arabic version).

ICRC,Work for the ICRC: Finance and Administration Manager: People Suffering inWar Need Your Skills, Geneva, November 2017, 7 pp.

ICRC, Work for the ICRC: HR Manager: People Suffering in War Need Your Skills,Geneva, November 2017, 7 pp.

ICRC, Work for the ICRC: People Suffering in War Need Your Skills, Geneva,October 2017, 15 pp.

Kenichi Oishi, Zaza: The 14-Year-Old Child Soldier: Journal Comics, illus. MorihikoIshikawa, Geneva, 2015, 222 pp.

Isabel Ortigosa et al., Humanitarian Challenges 2017: Colombia Report: Resultsand Perspectives, ICRC, Bogotá, March 2017, 37 pp. (English and Spanishversions).

Books and articles

398

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Jessica Sallabank, Witnessing History: A Portrait of the ICRC’s Work in South-EastAsia, illus. Sonal Dhama, foreword by Peter Maurer, ICRC RegionalCommunication Centre, New Delhi, March 2016, 163 pp.

Articles

Irène Herrmann et al., “Le paradoxe humanitaire”, Campus: Le MagazineScientifique de l’Université de Genève, No. 134, September 2018, pp. 16–43.

Silke Von der Emde, “Women in the Archive: Locating the International TracingService in German Memory Work”, Seminar: A Journal of Germanic Studies, Vol.53, No. 3, 2017, pp. 202–218.

International Committee of the Red Cross

Books

ICRC, Code of Conduct for Employees of the International Committee of the RedCross, Geneva, May 2018, 12 pp. (English version); Geneva, August 2018, 12 pp.(French version); Geneva, August 2018, 12 pp. (Spanish version); Geneva,November 2018, 12 pp. (Portuguese version); Cairo, 2018, 12 pp. (Arabic version).

ICRC, ICRC Strategy 2019–2022, Geneva, September 2018, 24 pp. (English version);Geneva, October 2018, 24 pp. (French version).

International criminal law

Books

Fred L. Borch,Military Trials of War Criminals in the Netherlands East Indies 1946–1949, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2017, xii + 255 pp.

Martin Böse et al. (eds), Justice without Borders: Essays in Honour of WolfgangSchomburg, Brill Nijhoff, Leiden and Boston, MA, 2018, xxviii + 456 pp.

Michael Bryant, A World History of War Crimes: From Antiquity to the Present,Bloomsbury, London, 2016, viii + 289 pp.

Matthias Cernusca, A Comparative Approach to Normative Elements in theDefinition of International Crimes, 2018, 396 pp.

TomDannenbaum, The Crime of Aggression, Humanity, and the Soldier, CambridgeUniversity Press, Cambridge, 2018, xxvii + 352 pp.

New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee

of the Red Cross

399

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Mark S. Ellis, Yves Doutriaux and Timothy W. Ryback (eds), Justice and Diplomacy:Resolving Contradictions in Diplomatic Practice and International HumanitarianLaw, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2018, ix + 116 pp.

Frank Haldemann and Thomas Unger (eds), The United Nations Principles toCombat Impunity: A Commentary, assistant ed. Valentina Cadelo, OxfordUniversity Press, Oxford, 2018, xxxiii + 438 pp.

Philipp Kastner (ed.), International Criminal Law in Context, Routledge, New Yorkand London, 2018, xvii + 346 pp.

Taicha Maiga, La problématique de la répression des crimes de guerre et des crimes degénocide en Afrique, L’Harmattan-Sénégal, Dakar, 2017, 370 pp.

Dan Plesch, Human Rights after Hitler: The Lost History of Prosecuting Axis WarCrimes, Georgetown University Press, Washington, DC, 2017, xx + 250 pp.

Thomas Rauter, Judicial Practice, Customary International Criminal Law andNullum Crimen Sine Lege, Springer, Cham, 2017, xvi + 261 pp.

Steven P. Remy, The Malmedy Massacre: The War Crimes Trial Controversy,Harvard University Press, Cambridge and London, 2017, viii + 342 pp.

James Larry Taulbee, Genocide, Mass Atrocity, and War Crimes in Modern History:Blood and Conscience, 2 vols, Praeger, Santa Barabara, CA, and Denver, CO, 2017,360, 336 pp.

Jonathan Waterlow and Jacques Schuhmacher, War Crimes Trials andInvestigations: A Multi-Disciplinary Introduction, Palgrave Macmillan, Basingstokeand New York, 2018, xiv + 338 pp.

Sandra Wilson et al., Japanese War Criminals: The Politics of Justice after the SecondWorld War, Columbia University Press, New York, 2017, xv + 417 pp.

Articles

Gideon Boas and Pascale Chifflet, “Suspected War criminals in Australia: Law andPolicy”, Melbourne University Law Review, Vol. 40, No. 1, 2016, pp. 46–86.

Elena Carpanelli, “Transitional Justice in Colombia: Shadows and Lights of theAgreement on Victims of the Conflict”, Diritti Umani e Diritto Internazionale,Vol. 11, No. 3, 2017, pp. 643–674.

W. L. Cheah and Moritz Vormbaum, “British War Crimes Trials in Europe andAsia, 1945–1949: A Comparative Study”, Leiden Journal of International Law,Vol. 31, No. 3, September 2018, pp. 669–692.

Michael G. Kearney, “On the Situation in Palestine and the War Crime of Transferof Civilians into Occupied Territory”, Criminal Law Forum, Vol. 28, No. 1, 2017, pp.1–34.

Books and articles

400

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Robert Kolb, “Gotovina and the ICTY”, Swiss Review of International and EuropeanLaw/Schweizerische Zeitschrift für Internationales und Europäisches Recht/RevueSuisse de Droit International et de Droit Européen, Vol. 27, No. 4, 2017, pp. 483–487.

Amy H. McCarthy, “Erosion of the Rule of Law as a Basis for CommandResponsibility under International Humanitarian Law”, Chicago Journal ofInternational Law, Vol. 18, No. 2, 2018, pp. 553–593.

Raphael Lorenzo Aguiling Pangalangan, “Dominic Ongwen and the Rotten SocialBackground Defense: The Criminal Culpability of Child Soldiers Turned WarCriminals”, American University International Law Review, Vol. 33, No. 3, 2018,605–635.

Darryl Robinson, “A Justification of Command Responsibility”, Criminal LawForum, Vol. 28, 2017, pp. 633–668.

Lenneke Sprik, “Command Responsibility in Peacekeeping Missions: NormativeObligations of Protection in Criminal Law Environment”, Journal of Conflict andSecurity Law, Vol. 22, No. 3, 2017, pp. 497–522.

International human rights law

Books

Vincent Coussirat-Coustère et al., Réciprocité et universalité: Sources et régimes dudroit international des droits de l’homme: Mélanges en l’honneur du ProfesseurEmmanuel Decaux, Pedone, Paris, 2017, 1373 pp.

Paul De Hert, Stefaan Smis and Mathias Holvoet (eds), Convergences andDivergences between International Human Rights, International Humanitarianand International Criminal Law, Intersentia, Cambridge, 2018, xvi + 298 pp.

Brian Drohan, Brutality in an Age of Human Rights: Activism andCounterinsurgency at the End of the British Empire, Cornell University Press,Ithaca, NY, and London, 2017, xiv + 240 pp.

U. C. Jha, Indian Military Domestic Deployment: Armed Forces Special Powers Actand Human Rights, Vij Books India, New Delhi, 2017, xi + 310 pp.

Satvinder S. Juss (ed.), Human Rights and America’s War on Terror, Routledge,London and New York, 2019, xxiii + 238 pp.

Dieudonné Kalindye Byanjira, in collaboration with Jacques KambaleBira’Mbovote, Précis de la méthodologie en droits de l’homme et droitinternational humanitaire, L’Harmattan, Paris, 2018, 277 pp.

Daniel Moeckli, Sangeeta Shah and Sandesh Sivakumaran (eds), InternationalHuman Rights Law, consultant ed. David Harris, 3rd ed., Oxford UniversityPress, Oxford, 2018, lviii + 644 pp.

New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee

of the Red Cross

401

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Melik Özden, Transnational Corporations’ Impunity, CETIM, Geneva, 2016,102 pp.

Ian Park, The Right to Life in Armed Conflict, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2018,xxvi + 239 pp.

Articles

Rogier Bartels, “The Interplay between International Human Rights Law andInternational Humanitarian Law during International Criminal Trials”, HumanRights and International Legal Discourse, Vol. 12, No. 1, 2018, pp. 44–61.

Samantha Bradley, “What if Goliath Killed David? The Coalition to Counter ISISand the Status and Responsibility of ISIS’ Child Soldiers”, American UniversityInternational Law Review, Vol. 33, No. 3, 2018, pp. 571–604.

Deborah Casalin, “A Green Light Turning Red? The Potential Influence of HumanRights on Developing Customary Legal Protection against Conflict-DrivenDisplacement”, Human Rights and International Legal Discourse, Vol. 12, No. 1,2018, pp. 62–78.

Ishita Chakrabarty and Hardik Choudhary, “Participation in the Conduct ofHostilities and State Restraint on Killing”, Queen Mary Law Journal, Vol. 9,Spring 2018, pp. 49–66.

Andrew Clapham, “Human Rights in Armed Conflict: Metaphors, Maxims, and theMove to Interoperability”,Human Rights and International Legal Discourse, Vol. 12,No. 1, 2018, pp. 9–22.

Anthony Dworkin, “Individual, not Collective: Justifying the Resort to Force againstMembers of Non-State Armed Groups”, International Law Studies, Vol. 93, 2017,pp. 476–525.

Gloria Gaggioli, “A Legal Approach to Investigations of Arbitrary Deprivations ofLife in Armed Conflicts: The Need for a Dynamic Understanding of the Interplaybetween IHL and HRL”, Questions of International Law, Zoom-in 36, 2017, pp.27–51.

Luca Gervasoni, “A Contextual-Functional Approach to Investigations into Right toLife Violations in Armed Conflict”, Questions of International Law, Zoom-in 36,2017, pp. 5–26.

Jean-Marie Henckaerts and Ellen Nohle, “Concurrent Application of InternationalHumanitarian Law and International Human Rights Law Revisited”, Human Rightsand International Legal Discourse, Vol. 12, No. 1, 2018, pp. 23–43.

Peter Vedel Kessing, “Soft Law Instruments Regulating Armed Conflict: AreInternational Human Rights Standards Reflected?”, Human Rights andInternational Legal Discourse, Vol. 12, No. 1, 2018, pp. 79–98.

Books and articles

402

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Luciano Pezzano, “La agresión como punto de contacto entre el derechointernacional de los derechos humanos y el derecho internacional humanitario”,American University International Law Review, Vol. 33, No. 3, 2018, pp. 545–569.

Sergio Alejandro Rea Granados, “El desafío de interpretar el derecho internacionalde los derechos humanos y el derecho internacional humanitario”, AmericanUniversity International Law Review, Vol. 33, No. 3, 2018, pp. 517–544.

Sergio Alejandro Rea Granados et al., “Academy onHuman Rights andHumanitarianLaw Articles and Essays on Emerging Challenges in the Relationship betweenInternational Humanitarian Law and International Human Rights Law”, AmericanUniversity International Law Review, Vol. 33, No. 3, 2018, pp. 511–666.

Chiara Redaelli, “The Right to Rebel against Violations of Human Rights: A NewRole for the Responsibility to Protect?”, Palestine Yearbook of International Law,Vol. 19, 2016, pp. 8–41.

Brian Sang Y. K., “The Approach of African Human Rights Treaty Bodies toInternational Humanitarian Law: Normative Basis and Institutional Practice”,African Yearbook on International Humanitarian Law, 2017, pp. 1–36.

Ryan Santicola and Hila Wesa, “Extra-Territorial Use of Force, Civilian Casualties,and the Duty to Investigate”, Columbia Human Rights Law Review, Vol. 49, No. 3,2018, pp. 183–266.

Ogunnaike O. Taiwo, “Two Is Better than One: Systemic Integration ofInternational Humanitarian Law and International Human Rights Law to BokoHaram Conflict”, American University International Law Review, Vol. 33, No. 3,2018, pp. 637–666.

Wouter Vandenhole, “Human Rights Obligations of European States in the Contextof Peace Operations”,Military Law and Law ofWar Review/Revue de Droit Militaireet de Droit de la Guerre/Tijdschrift voor Militair Recht en Oorlogsrecht/Zeitschrift fürWehrrecht und Kriegsvölkerrecht/Rivista di Diritto Militare e di Diritto della Guerra/Revista de Derecho Militar y de Derecho de la Guerra, Vol. 55, No. 1, 2016–17, pp.31–74.

Ka Lok Yip, “What Does the Jurisdictional Hurdle under International HumanRights Law Mean for the Relationship between International Human Rights Lawand International Humanitarian Law?”, Human Rights and International LegalDiscourse, Vol. 12, No. 1, 2018, pp. 99–119.

International humanitarian law – development and scope

Books

Maartje Abbenhuis, The Hague Conferences and International Politics, 1898–1915,Bloomsbury Academic, London, 2019, xiii + 294 pp.

New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee

of the Red Cross

403

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Anne F. Bayefsky and Laurie R. Blank (eds), Incitement to Terrorism, Brill Nijhoff,Leiden and Boston, MA, 2018, xiii + 173 pp.

Yishai Beer, Military Professionalism and Humanitarian Law: The Struggle toReduce the Hazards of War, Oxford University Press, New York, 2018, xiv + 224 pp.

Annyssa Bellal et al., The War Report: Armed Conflicts in 2017, Geneva Academy ofInternational Humanitarian Law and Human Rights, Geneva, March 2018, 159 pp.

Rony Brauman and Régis Meyran, Guerres humanitaires? Mensonges et intox,Textuel, Paris, 2018, 127 pp.

James Crossland, War, Law and Humanity: The Campaign to Control Warfare,1853–1914, Bloomsbury Academic, London, 2018, xx + 256 pp.

Tanisha M. Fazal, Wars of Law: Unintended Consequences in the Regulation ofArmed Conflict, Cornell University Press, Ithaca, NY, and London, 2018, xii +327 pp.

Terry D. Gill et al., Leuven Manual on the International Law Applicable to PeaceOperations, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge and New York, 2017, 403 pp.

Kubo Macák, Internationalized Armed Conflicts in International Law, OxfordUniversity Press, Oxford, 2018, xl + 268 pp.

J. Martin Rochester, The New Warfare: Rethinking Rules for an Unruly World,Routledge, London and New York, 2016, xv + 159 pp.

Cecilia Tengroth and Kristina Lindvall (eds), IHL and Gender: Swedish Experiences,Swedish Red Cross and SwedishMinistry of Foreign Affairs, Stockholm, 2015, 164 pp.

John Fabian Witt, Two Humanitarianisms in Ambrose Bierce’s “An Occurrence atOwl Creek Bridge”, Yale Law School, Public Law Research Paper No. 636, 2018,29 pp.

Cindy Wittke, Law in the Twilight: International Courts and Tribunals, the SecurityCouncil and the Internationalisation Of Peace Agreements between State and Non-State Parties, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2018, xxxii + 244 pp.

Articles

Olivier Barsalou, “Preparing for War: The USA and the Making of the 1949 GenevaConventions on the Laws of War”, Journal of Conflict and Security Law, Vol. 23, No.1, 2018, pp. 49–73.

Yishai Beer, “Military Strategy: The Blind Spot of International Humanitarian Law”,Harvard National Security Journal, Vol. 8, No. 2, 2017, pp. 333–378.

J. F. R. Boddens Hosang, “The Effects of Paradigm Shifts on the Rules on the Useof Force in Military Operations”, Netherlands International Law Review, Vol. 64,No. 3, 2017, pp. 353–373.

Books and articles

404

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Martha M. Bradley, “Expanding the Borders of Common Article 3 in Non-International Armed Conflicts: Amending Its Geographical Application throughSubsequent Practice?”, Netherlands International Law Review, Vol. 64, No. 3,2017, pp. 375–406.

Mikayla Brier-Mills, “Questioning the Utility of the Distinction between CommonArticles 2 and 3 of the Geneva Conventions of 1949 since Tadić: A State SovereigntyApproach”, Macquarie Law Journal, Vol. 17, 2017, pp. 17–36.

Michael Brzoska, “Current Challenges to Normative Restrictions on Warfare”,S + F: Sicherheit und Frieden, Vol. 36, No. 1, 2018, pp. 34–39.

María José Cervell Hortal, “El ataque de Estados Unidos contra Siria por el empleode armas químicas: ¿Acto contra legem o contramedida por violación del iuscogens?”, Anuario Español de Derecho Internacional, Vol. 33, 2017, pp. 169–203.

Alejandro Chehtman, “Revisionist Just War Theory and the Concept of WarCrimes”, Leiden Journal of International Law, Vol. 31, No. 1, 2018, pp. 171–194.

Geoffrey Corn et al., “Humanity’s Common Heritage: 2016 InternationalCommittee of the Red Cross Commentary on the First Geneva Convention”,Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law, Vol. 45, No. 3, 2017, pp.445–569.

Alexandre Skander Galand, “Approaching Custom Identification as a ConflictAvoidance Technique: Tadic and Kupreškic Revisited”, Leiden Journal ofInternational Law, Vol. 31, No. 2, 2018, pp. 403–429.

Patrick B. Grant, “Islamic Law, International Law, and Non-International ArmedConflict in Syria”, Boston University International Law Journal, Vol. 35, No. 1,2017, pp. 1–37.

Thomas D. Grant, “Frozen Conflicts and International Law”, Cornell InternationalLaw Journal, Vol. 50, No. 3, 2017, pp. 361–413.

Adil Ahmad Haque, “Whose Armed Conflict? Which Law of Armed Conflict?”,Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law, Vol. 45, No. 3, 2017, pp.475–493.

Lawrence Hill-Cawthorne, “Rights under International Humanitarian Law”,European Journal of International Law, Vol. 28, No. 4, 2017, pp. 1187–1215.

Freya Irani, “‘Lawfare’, US Military Discourse, and the Colonial Constitution ofLaw and War”, European Journal of International Security, Vol. 3, No. 1, 2017,pp. 113–133.

Michael John-Hopkins, “Mapping War, Peace and Terrorism in the GlobalInformation Environment”, Journal of International Humanitarian Legal Studies,Vol. 8, No. 1–2, 2017, pp. 202–233.

New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee

of the Red Cross

405

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Abdul Hamid Kwarteng and Thomas P. Botchway, “The North and South Divide inthe Practice and Application of International Law: A Humanitarian and HumanRight Law Perspective”, Journal of Politics and Law, Vol. 11, No. 1, 2018, pp. 79–87.

Noam Lubell, “Fragmented Wars: Multi-Territorial Military Operations againstArmed Groups”, International Law Studies, Vol. 93, 2017, pp. 215–250.

Giovanni Mantilla, “Forum Isolation: Social Opprobrium and the Origins ofthe International Law of Internal Conflict”, International Organization, Vol. 72,No. 2, 2018, pp. 317–349.

Mark “Max”Maxwell and Richard V. Meyer, “The Innocent Combatant: PreservingTheir Jus in Bello Protections”, Penn State Journal of Law and International Affairs,Vol. 5, No. 1, 2017, pp. 111–163.

Stephanie McCurry, “Enemy Women and the Laws of War in the American CivilWar”, Law and History Review, Vol. 35, No. 3, 2017, pp. 667–710.

Nicholas W. Mull, “A Critique of the ICRC’s Updated Commentary to the FirstGeneva Convention: Arming Medical Personnel and the Loss of ProtectedStatus”, Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law, Vol. 45, No. 3,2017, pp. 495–511.

Alexander Murray, “Terrorist or Armed Opposition Group Fighter? The Experienceof UK Courts and the Implications for Public International Law”, InternationalCommunity Law Review, Vol. 20, No. 3–4, 2018, pp. 281–310.

Michael A. Newton, “Contorting Common Article 3: Reflections on the RevisedICRC Commentary”, Georgia Journal of International and Comparative Law, Vol.45, No. 3, 2017, pp. 513–527.

Kosuke Onishi, “Rethinking the Permissive Function of Military Necessity inInternal Non-International Armed Conflict”, Israel Law Review, Vol. 51, No. 2,2018, pp. 235–259.

Alejandro Rodiles, “Law and Violence in the Global South: The Legal Framing ofMexico’s ‘Narco War’”, Journal of Conflict and Security Law, Vol. 23, No. 2,2018, pp. 269–281.

Elvira Rosert, “Salience and the Emergence of International Norms: Napalm andCluster Munitions in the Inhumane Weapons Convention”, Review ofInternational Studies, Vol. 45, No. 1, 2019, pp. 77–99.

Kevin Rousseau, “International Law and Military Strategy: Changes in the StrategicOperating Environment”, Journal of National Security Law and Policy, Vol. 9, No. 1,2017, pp. 1–27.

Will Smiley, “Lawless Wars of Empire? The International Law of War in thePhilippines, 1898–1903”, Law and History Review, Vol. 36, No. 3, 2018, pp. 511–550.

Books and articles

406

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Boyd van Dijk, “Human Rights in War: On the Entangled Foundations of the 1949Geneva Conventions”, American Journal of International Law, Vol. 112, No. 4,2018, pp. 553–582.

Cornelius Wiesener, “Tear Gas, Expanding Bullets and Plain-Clothed Personnel:The Interface between Human Rights and Humanitarian Law in Modern MilitaryOperations”, Humanitäres Völkerrecht: Informationsschriften/Journal ofInternational Law of Peace and Armed Conflict, Vol. 30, No. 3–4, 2017, pp. 82–90.

Siobhán Wills, “Use of Deadly Force by Peacekeepers Operating Outside of ArmedConflict Situations: What Laws Apply?”, Human Rights Quarterly: A Comparativeand International Journal of the Social Sciences, Humanities, and Law, Vol. 40,No. 3, 2018, pp. 663–702.

Corri Zoli, M. Cherif Bassiouni and Hamid Khan, “Justice in Post-Conflict Settings:Islamic Law and Muslim Communities as Stakeholders in Transition”, UtrechtJournal of International and European Law, Vol. 33, No. 85, 2017, pp. 38–61.

International humanitarian law – general issues

Books

Geoffrey Corn, Ken Watkin and Jamie Williamson, The Law in War: A ConciseOverview, Routledge, London and New York, 2018, xviii + 302 pp.

Eric David et al., Code de droit international humanitaire: Textes en vigueur au 2février 2018, 8th ed., Bruylant, Brussels, 2018, xx + 790 pp.

Knut Dörmann et al. (ed. committee) and Jean-Marie Henckaerts et al. (projectteam), Commentary on the Second Geneva Convention: Convention (II) for theAmelioration of the Condition of Wounded, Sick and Shipwrecked Members ofArmed Forces at Sea, 2nd ed., Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, andICRC, Geneva, 2017, xxii + 1331 pp.

Benoît Durieux, Jean-Baptiste Jeangène Vilmer and Frédéric Ramel, Dictionnaire dela guerre et de la paix, PUF, Paris, 2017, xxix + 1513 pp.

ICRC, International Humanitarian Law, Geneva, January 2018, 6 pp.

Nils Melzer, Droit international humanitaire: Introduction détaillée, coordinated byEtienne Kuster, ICRC, Geneva, April 2018, 399 pp. (French version); Cairo, 2016,319 pp. (Arabic version); Moscow, 2017, 417 pp. (Russian version).

Dražan Djukic and Niccolò Pons (eds), The Companion to InternationalHumanitarian Law, Brill Nijhoff, Leiden and Boston, MA, 2018, xl + 719 pp.

José Luis Rodríguez-Villasante y Prieto and Joaquín López Sánchez (eds), Derechointernacional humanitario, 3rd ed., Tirant lo Blanch and Spanish Red Cross,Valencia, 2017, 1312 pp.

New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee

of the Red Cross

407

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Natalino Ronzitti, Diritto internazionale dei conflitti armati, 6th ed., G. Giappichelli,Torino, 2017, xi + 445 pp.

Maira Sheikh and Moghees Uddin Khan, Understanding InternationalHumanitarian Law: A Primer on IHL and Pakistan’s Domestic Law, ResearchSociety of International Law Pakistan, Lahore, 2016.

Nicholas Tsagourias and Alasdair Morrison, International Humanitarian Law:Cases, Materials and Commentary, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2018,xxxviii + 386 pp.

Arjen Vermeer, Boukje Pieters and Mirjam de Bruin, Inleiding humanitairoorlogsrecht, T. M. C. Asser Press and Netherlands Red Cross, The Hague, 2017,xii + 273 pp.

International humanitarian law – implementation anddissemination

Books

ASEAN Institute for Peace and Reconciliation, Strengthening Convergences forHumanitarian Action in ASEAN: An ASEAN Institute for Peace andReconciliation Symposium on International Humanitarian Law: Manila,Philippines 2–3 October 2017, Manila, 2017, 202 pp.

Björnstjern Baade, Linus Mührel and Anton O. Petrov (eds), InternationalHumanitarian Law in Areas of Limited Statehood: Adaptable and Legitimate orRigid and Unreasonable?, Nomos, Baden-Baden, 2018, 251 pp.

Samantha Besson (ed.) with the assistance of Matthieu Loup, InternationalResponsibility: Essays in Law, History and Philosophy, Schulthess, Geneva, 2017,xiv + 244 pp.

WilliamH. Boothby andWolff Heintschel von Heinegg, The Law ofWar: A DetailedAssessment of the US Department of Defense Law of War Manual, CambridgeUniversity Press, Cambridge, 2018, xxiii + 456 pp.

Pauline Therese Collins, Civil-Military “Legal” Relations: Where to From Here? TheCivilian Courts and the Military in the United Kingdom, United States and Australia,Brill Nijhoff, Leiden and Boston, MA, 2018, xvii + 387 pp.

Matthew Evangelista and Nina Tannenwald (eds), Do the Geneva ConventionsMatter?, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2017, xii + 362 pp.

Isabelle Gallino, Factors Motivating Non-State Armed Groups to Comply withInternational Humanitarian Law: Reflections on Positive Practices, 2017, 40 pp.

Rob Grace and Claude Bruderlein (eds), Program on Humanitarian Policy andConflict Research, HPCR Practitioner’s Handbook on Monitoring, Reporting, and

Books and articles

408

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Fact-Finding: Investigating International Law Violations, Cambridge UniversityPress, Cambridge, 2017, viii + 334 pp.

ICRC, Enhancing Protection in Armed Conflict through Domestic Law and Policy:Universal Meeting of National Committees and Similar Bodies on InternationalHumanitarian Law: Conference Overview: Geneva, Switzerland, 30 November–2December 2016, Geneva, November 2017, 85 pp. (English version); Geneva,March 2018, 88 pp. (French version).

Inter-Parliamentary Union and ICRC, International Humanitarian Law, 2nd ed.,Geneva, 2016, 128 pp. (English version); Geneva, 2016, 136 pp. (French version).

Alon Margalit, Investigating Civilian Casualties in Time of Armed Conflict andBelligerent Occupation: Manoeuvring between Legal Regimes and Paradigms forthe Use of Force, Brill Nijhoff, Leiden and Boston, MA, 2018, xii + 292 pp.

Clara Sandoval and Miriam Puttick, Reparations for the Victims of Conflict in Iraq:Lessons Learned from Comparative Practice, Ceasefire Centre for Civilian Rights andMinority Rights Group International, London, November 2017, 34 pp.

Sergey Sayapin and Evhen Tsybulenko (eds), The Use of Force against Ukraine andInternational Law: Jus ad Bellum, Jus in Bello, Jus post Bellum, Asser Press, TheHague, 2018, xxvii + 454 pp.

Articles

Christopher E. Bailey, “The Quest for Justice: Joseph Kony and the Lord’sResistance Army”, Fordham International Law Journal, Vol. 40, No. 2, 2017, pp.247–328.

Annyssa Bellal, “Welcome on Board: Improving Respect for InternationalHumanitarian Law through the Engagement of Armed Non-State Actors”,Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law, Vol. 19, 2016, pp. 37–61.

Matthew Bywater, “Classical and Political Humanitarianisms in an Era of MilitaryInterventionism and the War on Terror”, Journal of International HumanitarianLegal Studies, Vol. 8, No. 1–2, 2017, pp. 33–112.

Ian Clark et al., “Crisis in the Laws of War? Beyond Compliance and Effectiveness”,European Journal of International Relations, Vol. 24, No. 2, 2018, pp. 319–343.

Commonwealth Secretariat, “Promotion and Implementation of InternationalHumanitarian Law: A Commonwealth Perspective”, Commonwealth Law Bulletin,Vol. 43, No. 3–4, 2017, pp. 504–520.

Erika de Wet, “Complicity in Violations of Human Rights and Humanitarian Lawby Incumbent Governments through Direct Military Assistance on Request”,International and Comparative Law Quarterly, Vol. 67, No. 2, 2018, pp. 287–313.

New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee

of the Red Cross

409

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John C. Dehn, “Why a President Cannot Authorize the Military to Violate (Most of)the Law of War”,William and Mary Law Review, Vol. 59, No. 3, 2018, pp. 813–896.

Katharine Fortin, “Armed Groups and Procedural Accountability: A Roadmap forFurther Thought”, Yearbook of International Humanitarian Law, Vol. 19, 2016,pp. 157–180.

Charles Garraway, “Fact Finding and States in Emergency”, ILSA Journal ofInternational and Comparative Law, Vol. 22, No. 2, 2016, pp. 471–481.

David Glazier et al., “Failing our Troops: A Critical Assessment of the Departmentof Defense Law of War Manual”, Yale Journal of International Law, Vol. 42, No. 2,2017, pp. 215–278.

Hyeran Jo, “Compliance with International Humanitarian Law by Non-StateArmed Groups: How Can It Be Improved?”, Yearbook of InternationalHumanitarian Law, Vol. 19, 2016, pp. 63–88.

Pablo Kalmanovitz, “Entre el deber de protección y la necesidad militar:Oscilaciones del discurso humanitario en Colombia, 1991–2016”, Latin AmericanLaw Review, No. 1, July 2018, pp. 33–60.

Henok Ashagrey Kremte, “Minimizing Human Suffering and Protecting PersonsAffected by Conflict: A Critical Appraisal of the Compliance System ofInternational Humanitarian Law”, Beijing Law Review, Vol. 8, No. 4, 2017 pp.440–450.

Christian Marxsen et al., “Reparation for Victims of Armed Conflict: Impulses fromthe Max Planck Trialogues”, Zeitschrift für Ausländisches Öffentliches Recht undVölkerrecht/Heidelberg Journal of International Law, Vol. 78, No. 3, 2018, pp.519–806.

Luke Moffett, Dug Cubie and Andrew Godden, “Bringing the Battlefield into theClassroom: Using Video Games to Teach and Assess International HumanitarianLaw”, The Law Teacher, Vol. 51, No. 4, 2017, pp. 499–514.

Hilde D. Roskam, “Crime-Based Targeted Sanctions: Promoting Respect forInternational Humanitarian Law by the Security Council”, Yearbook ofInternational Humanitarian Law, Vol. 19, 2016, pp. 89–117.

Claude Schenker, “Dépositaire: Une impartialité sous surveillance: L’exemple de laSuisse”, Swiss Review of International and European Law/Schweizerische Zeitschriftfür Internationales und Europäisches Recht/Revue Suisse de Droit International et deDroit Européen, Vol. 28, No. 1, 2018, pp. 25–58.

Ariel Zemach, “Indeterminacy in the Law of War: The Need for an InternationalAdvisory Regime”, Brooklyn Journal of International Law, Vol. 43, No. 1, 2017,pp. 1–74.

Books and articles

410

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International humanitarian law – types of actors

Books

Academy of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights, Human RightsObligations of Armed Non-State Actors: An Exploration of the Practice of the UNHuman Rights Council, Geneva, 2016, 51 pp.

Anne-Marie Buzatu, Towards an International Code of Conduct for Private SecurityProviders: A View from Inside a Multistakeholder Process, DCAF, Geneva, 2015,115 pp.

DCAF, The Montreux Document: Report of the Ethiopia Regional Conference onPrivate Military and Security Companies, Geneva, 2016, vi + 94 pp.

Carla Ferstman, International Organizations and the Fight for Accountability: TheRemedies and Reparations Gap, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2017, xii + 221 pp.

Conor Foley, UN Peacekeeping Operations and the Protection of Civilians: SavingSucceeding Generations, Cambridge University Press, New York, 2017, xvi + 418 pp.

Sabrina Henry, Transposition de la notion de “fonction de combat continue” dans lesconflits armés internationaux et son application aux forces armées gouvernementalesdans les conflits armés non internationaux: Essai final L.LM en droit internationalhumanitaire et droits humains (Geneva Academy), 2015, 36 pp.

U. C. Jha, Child Soldiers: Practice, Law and Remedies, Vij Books India, New Delhi,2018, ix + 294 pp.

Moritz P. Moelle, The International Responsibility of International Organisations:Cooperation in Peacekeeping Operations, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge,2017, xiv + 373 pp.

David Nauta, The International Responsibility of NATO and Its Personnel duringMilitary Operations, Brill Nijhoff, Leiden and Boston, MA, 2018, xvi + 194 pp.

Tilman Rodenhäuser, Organizing Rebellion: Non-State Armed Groups underInternational Humanitarian Law, Human Rights Law, and International CriminalLaw, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2018, xxxvi + 360 pp.

Orly Maya Stern, Gender, Conflict and International Humanitarian Law: A Critiqueof the “Principle of Distinction”, Routledge, London and New York, 2019, ix + 242pp.

James Summers and Alex Gough (eds), Non-State Actors and InternationalObligations: Creation, Evolution and Enforcement, Brill Nijhoff, Leiden andBoston, MA, 2018, xxxvi + 487 pp.

Helena Torroja (ed.), Public International Law and Human Rights Violations byPrivate Military and Security Companies, Springer, Cham, 2017, ix + 158 pp.

New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee

of the Red Cross

411

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Articles

Zia Akhtar, “Naxalite Rebellion: Domestic Law and Order, and Humanitarian Lawin a Non-International Armed Conflict”, Journal of International HumanitarianLegal Studies, Vol. 8, No. 1–2, 2017, pp. 1–32.

Serge Théophile Bambara, “La justiciabilité des infractions des forces armées dansles opérations de paix”, Revue Québécoise de Droit International, Vol. 29, No. 1,2016, pp. 1–26.

Annyssa Bellal and Ezequiel Heffes, “‘Yes, I Do’: Binding Armed Non-State Actorsto IHL and Human Rights Norms through Their Consent”, Human Rights andInternational Legal Discourse, Vol. 12, No. 1, 2018, pp. 120–136.

Alice S. Debarre, “U.S.-Hired Private Military and Security Companies in ArmedConflict: Indirect Participation and Its Consequences”, Harvard National SecurityJournal, Vol. 7, No. 2, 2016, pp. 437–468.

Tom Gal, “The International Legal Status of Armed Groups: Can One BeDetermined Outside the Scope of Armed Conflict?”, Israel Law Review, Vol. 51,No. 2, 2018, pp. 321–335.

Patrycja Grzebyk, “The Status of Police in Armed Conflicts”, Israel Yearbook onHuman Rights, Vol. 48, 2018, pp. 105–124.

Ezequiel Heffes and Brian E. Frenkel, “The International Responsibility of Non-State Armed Groups: In Search of the Applicable Rules”, Goettingen Journal ofInternational Law, Vol. 8, No. 1, 2017, pp. 39–72.

Steven Hill and David Lemétayer, “Legal Issues of Multinational MilitaryOperations: An Alliance Perspective”, Revue de Droit Militaire et de Droit de laGuerre/The Military Law and Law of War Review/Tijdschrift voor Militair Rechten Oorlogsrecht/Zeitschrift für Wehrrecht und Kriegsvölkerrecht/Rivista di DirittoMilitare e di Diritto Della Guerra/Revista de Derecho Militar y de Derecho de laGuerra, Vol. 55, No. 1, 2016–17, pp. 13–29.

Laura Iñigo Alvarez, “Challenging the Westphalian Order: Incorporating ArmedGroups in Law-Making under International Humanitarian Law”, OrdineInternazionale e Diritti Umani, No. 2, May 2017, pp. 167–189.

Stephen Kingah, “Legal Treatment of Boko Haram Militants Captured byCameroon”, Revue Africaine de Droit International et Comparé/African Journal ofInternational and Comparative Law, Vol. 26, No. 1, 2018, pp. 44–63.

Mark Klamberg, “The Legality of Rebel Courts during Non-International ArmedConflicts”, Journal of International Criminal Justice, Vol. 16, No. 2, 2018, pp.235–263.

Xiao Mao, “Are ‘Unlawful Combatants’ Protected under InternationalHumanitarian Law?”, Amsterdam Law Forum, Vol. 10, No. 2, 2018, pp. 62–71.

Books and articles

412

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Daragh Murray, “Engaging Armed Groups through the Development of HumanRights Obligations: Incorporating Practice, Motivation and Ideology to PromoteCompliance with International Law”, Yearbook of International HumanitarianLaw, Vol. 19, 2016, pp. 119–155.

Mara R. Revkin, “When Terrorists Govern: Protecting Civilians in Conflicts withState-Building Armed Groups”, Harvard National Security Journal, Vol. 9, No. 1,2018, pp. 100–145.

Tilman Rodenhäuser, “Armed Groups, Rebel Coalitions, and Transnational Groups:The Degree of Organization Required from Non-State Armed Groups to BecomeParty to a Non-International Armed Conflict”, Yearbook of InternationalHumanitarian Law, Vol. 19, 2016, pp. 3–35.

Artem Sergeev, “Applying Additional Protocol II of the Geneva Conventions to theUnited Nations Forces: Legal Insights on a Growing Responsibility”, Journal ofInternational Humanitarian Legal Studies, Vol. 8, No. 1–2, 2017, pp. 234–254.

Crispin Smith, “Independent without Independence: The Iraqi-Kurdish Peshmergain International Law”, Harvard International Law Journal, Vol. 59, No. 1, 2018, pp.245–277.

Travis R. Stevens-White, “Applying Combatant Status under the International Lawof Armed Conflict to the Domestic Militia System of the United States”, MilitaryLaw Review, Vol. 225, No. 2, 2017, pp. 486–511.

Carolina Villacampa and Katherine Flórez, “Human Trafficking for CriminalExploitation and Participation in Armed Conflicts: The Colombian Case”, Crime,Law and Social Change, No. 69, No. 3, 2018, pp. 421–444.

International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement

Books

Paolo Cioni and Maria Enrica Monaco, La Grande Guerra et la Croce Rossa:L’Empolese Valdelsa, Polistampa, Florence, 2018, 186 pp.

ICRC, Circulaires du Comité international de la Croix-Rouge/Circulars of theInternational Committee of the Red Cross/Circulares del Comité Internacional dela Cruz Roja: 2017, No. 630–631, Geneva, 2017, 28 pp.

Red Cross of Viet Nam, [History of the Red Cross in Vietnam], 2016, 479 pp. (inVietnamese).

Axel Sotiris Walldén, [Humanitarian Aid to Occupied Greece: The Mission of theSwedish Red Cross 1942–1945], Themelio Ekdoseis, Athens, 2017, 366 pp. (in Greek).

New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee

of the Red Cross

413

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Articles

Michel Maietta, “Origine et évolution des ONG dans le système humanitaireinternational”, Revue Internationale et Stratégique, Vol. 2015/2, No. 98, 2015, pp. 53–59.

María Luisa Soriano González, “La Cruz Roja: De los principios ético-jurídicos alprincipio de la paz: Fundamentos de la concepción de la Cruz Roja comoorganización para la paz”, Derechos y Libertades, No. 36, Época II, January 2017,pp. 167–196.

Journalists

Books

Chema Suárez Serrano, Periodismo y derecho internacional humanitario: Un análisispara el siglo 21, Dykinson, Madrid, 2017, 331 pp.

Law of air and space warfare

Articles

Bill Boothby, “Space Weapons and the Law”, International Law Studies, Vol. 93,2017, pp. 179–214.

Wolff Heintschel von Heinegg, “Neutrality and Outer Space”, International LawStudies, Vol. 93, 2017, pp. 526–547.

Dale Stephens, “The International Legal Implications of Military Space Operations:Examining the Interplay between International Humanitarian Law and the OuterSpace Legal Regime”, International Law Studies, Vol. 94, 2018, pp. 75–101.

Law of naval warfare

Books

Oliver Daum, Das Völkerrecht der Seeblockade: Ein Beitrag zur dogmatischenKategorisierung konkreter Konflikthandlungen, Nomos, Baden-Baden, 2016, 253 pp.

Phillip Drew, The Law of Maritime Blockade: Past, Present, and Future, OxfordUniversity Press, Oxford, 2017, xvii + 168 pp.

Martin Fink, Maritime Interception and the Law of Naval Operations: A Study ofLegal Bases and Legal Regimes in Maritime Interception Operations, Asser Press,The Hague, 2018, xvi + 317 pp.

Books and articles

414

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Jörg Schildknecht et al. (eds), Operational Law in International Straits and CurrentMaritime Security Challenges, Springer, Cham, 2018, vi + 289 pp.

Articles

Akira Mayama, “Combat Losses of Nuclear-Powered Warships: Contamination,Collateral Damage and the Law”, International Law Studies, Vol. 93, 2017, pp. 132–156.

Law of neutrality

Books

Kentaro Wani, Neutrality in International Law: From the Sixteenth Century to 1945,Routledge, London and New York, 2017, xvii + 226 pp.

Law of occupation

Books

Orna Ben-Naftali, Michael Sfard and Hedi Viterbo, The ABC of the OPT: A LegalLexicon of the Israeli Control over the Occupied Palestinian Territory, CambridgeUniversity Press, Cambridge, 2018, ix + 572 pp.

Hanne Cuyckens, Revisiting the Law of Occupation, Brill Nijhoff, Leiden and Boston,MA, 2018, vii + 288 pp.

Wayne Jordash, Is Donbas Occupied?, Global Rights Compliance, Wallington,February 2017, 19 pp.

Marco Longobardo, The Use of Armed Force in Occupied Territory, CambridgeUniversity Press, Cambridge, 2018, xxix + 320 pp.

Articles

Ena Cefo, “Corporate Human Rights Violations in the Occupied PalestinianTerritories: Is There Any Recourse?”, Georgetown Journal of International Law,Vol. 47, No. 2, 2016, pp. 793–832.

Hanne Cuyckens, “Is Israel Still an Occupying Power in Gaza?”, NetherlandsInternational Law Review, Vol. 63, No. 3, 2016, pp. 275–295.

Alexander Gilder, “Bringing Occupation into the 21st Century: The EffectiveImplementation of Occupation by Proxy”, Utrecht Law Review, Vol. 13, No. 1,2017, pp. 60–81.

New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee

of the Red Cross

415

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Alonso Gurmendi Dunkelberg, “Your Country, My Rules: Can MilitaryOccupations Create Successful Transitions?”, Georgetown Journal of InternationalLaw, Vol. 46, No. 4, 2015, pp. 979–1007.

Marco Longobardo, “State Responsibility for International Humanitarian LawViolations by Private Actors in Occupied Territories and the Exploitation ofNatural Resources”, Netherlands International Law Review, Vol. 63, No. 3, 2016,pp. 251–274.

Ofilio J. Mayorga, “Occupants, Beware of BITs: Applicability of Investment Treatiesto Occupied Territories”, Palestine Yearbook of International Law, Vol. 19, 2016, pp.136–176.

Kerry Rittich, “Occupied Iraq: Imperial Convergences?”, Leiden Journal ofInternational Law, Vol. 31, No. 3, 2018, pp. 479–508.

Medical and religious personnel and objects

Books

ICRC, A Matter of Life and Death: Tackling Violence against Health Care inPakistan, Peru and El Salvador: Selected Experiences, Geneva, January 2018, 34pp. (English version); Geneva, April 2018, 34 pp. (French version); Geneva,March 2018, 34 pp. (Spanish version); Geneva, May 2018, 34 pp. (Portugueseversion); Geneva, 2017, 34 pp. (Arabic version).

ICRC, Changing Behaviour: Tackling Violence against Health Care in Niger, theCentral African Republic and Nigeria: Selected Experiences, Geneva, October 2018,24 pp.

ICRC, Security Survey for Health Facilities: User Manual, Geneva, October 2017,70 pp.

Articles

Rain Liivoja, “Biomedical Enhancement of Warfighters and the Legal Protection ofMilitary Medical Personnel in Armed Conflict”,Medical Law Review, Vol. 26, No. 3,2017, pp. 421–448.

Jean H. Quataert, “A New Look at International Law: Gendering the Practices ofHumanitarian Medicine in Europe’s ‘Small Wars,’ 1879–1907”, Human RightsQuarterly: A Comparative and International Journal of the Social Sciences,Humanities, and Law, Vol. 40, No.3, 2018, pp. 547–569.

Parthan Shiv Vishvanathan, “Violence without Borders: The Legal Ramifications ofthe Airstrike on the Médecins Sans Frontières Hospital in Kunduz on 3 October2015”, AALCO Journal of International Law, Vol. 4, No. 1, 2015.

Books and articles

416

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Missing persons/deceased persons

Books

ICRC, Les migrants disparus et leurs familles: Recommandations du CICR àl’intention des responsables politiques, Geneva, November 2017, 27 pp.

ICRC, Living with Absence: Helping the Families of the Missing, Geneva, May 2018,26 pp. (English version); Geneva, September 2018, 26 pp. (French version); Geneva,July 2015, 26 pp. (Spanish version); Geneva, August 2015, 26 pp. (Portugueseversion).

Patricia Naftali, La construction du “droit à la vérité” en droit international,Bruylant, Brussels, 2017, xxvi + 550 pp.

Morris Tidball-Binz et al. (eds), Gestion des dépouilles mortelles lors de catastrophes:Manuel pratique à l’usage des premiers intervenants, 2nd éd., PAHO, Washington,DC, and WHO, ICRC and IFRC, Geneva, 2016, viii + 65 pp.

Articles

José Elías Esteve Moltó, “Les droits des victimes de disparition forcée devant la Coureuropéenne des droits de l’homme: la nécessité de la fertilisation croisée avec lesystème interaméricain”, Annuaire Français de Droit International, Vol. 62, 2016,pp. 405–427.

Danushka S. Medawatte, “The Vanishing Act: Punishing and Deterring Perpetratorsthrough the Concurrent Application of Diverse Legal Regimes to EnforcedDisappearances”,Florida Journal of International Law, Vol. 29,No. 2, 2017, pp. 227–251.

Jorge Rodríguez Rodríguez, “A propósito del 40 aniversario del Protocolo I a losConvenios de Ginebra: De la construcción del derecho a saber a la unidad para labúsqueda de personas dadas por desaparecidas en el contexto y en razón delconflicto colombiano”, Revista Electrónica de Estudios Internacionales, No. 34,December 2017, 28 pp.

National Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies

Books

Thai Red Cross Society, [The Heritage of the Thai Red Cross Society: Part 1], 2015 (inThai).

New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee

of the Red Cross

417

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Natural environment

Books

Karen Hulme (ed.), Law of the Environment and Armed Conflict, Edward Elgar,Cheltenham and Northampton, 2017, xxxiv + 870 pp.

Carsten Stahn, Jens Iverson and Jennifer S. Easterday (eds), EnvironmentalProtection and Transitions from Conflict to Peace, Oxford University Press,Oxford, 2017, xlii + 461 pp.

Articles

Viola Vincze, “The Role of Customary Principles of International HumanitarianLaw in Environmental Protection”, Pécs Journal of International and EuropeanLaw, Vol. 2017/2, 2017, pp. 19–39.

Persons deprived of liberty/detention

Books

ICRC, Ageing and Detention, Geneva, ICRC, April 2018, 30 pp. (English version);Geneva, October 2018, 30 pp. (French version).

ICRC,Dignity and Safety in Restrictive Detention Regimes, Geneva, May 2018, 26 pp.

ICRC, Health Care in Detention: Health Systems and Needs Assessments in Prisons:Practical Guide and Toolkit, Geneva, February 2018, 47 pp. (English version);Geneva, November 2018, 52 pp. (French version); Geneva, November 2018,50 pp. (Spanish version).

ICRC, Towards Humane Prisons: A Principled and Participatory Approach to PrisonPlanning and Design, Geneva, April 2018, v + 197 pp.

Dirk Jordan, with a contribution by Wolfgang Ellerbrock, Idylle und Lager:Schlachtensee 1933–1945: Zwangsarbeiter- und Kriegsgefangenenlager, D. Jordan,Berlin-Schlachtensee, 2017, 62 pp.

Will Smiley, From Slaves to Prisoners of War: The Ottoman Empire, Russia andInternational Law, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2018, x + 283 pp.

Markus Stuke, Der Rechtsstatus des Kriegsgefangenen im bewaffneten Konflikt:Historische Entwicklung und geltendes Recht, Mohr Siebeck, Tübingen, 2017,xxix + 523 pp.

Books and articles

418

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Articles

Yateesh Begoore, “Prisoners Dilemma: Ascertaining and Augmenting theMultinational NIAC Detention Regime”, Max Planck Yearbook of United NationsLaw, Vol. 20, No. 1, 2017, pp. 436–453.

Andrew Clapham, “Detention by Armed Groups under International Law”,International Law Studies, Vol. 93, 2017, pp. 1–44.

ICRC, Harvard Law School Program on International Law and Armed Conflict, andStockton Center for the Study of International Law, US Naval War College, “TheFuture of U.S. Detention under International Law: Workshop Report”,International Law Studies, Vol. 93, 2017, pp. 272–298.

Andrea Harrison, “Periodic Review Boards for Law-of-War Detention inGuantanamo: What Next?”, ILSA Journal of International and Comparative Law,Vol. 24, No. 3, 2018, pp. 541–578.

Sarah Kovner, “A War of Words: Allied Captivity and Swiss Neutrality in thePacific, 1941–1945”, Diplomatic History, Vol. 41, No. 4, 2017, pp. 719–746.

Yuval Shany, “A Human Rights Perspective to Global Battlefield Detention: Timeto Reconsider Indefinite Detention”, International Law Studies, Vol. 93, 2017,pp. 102–131.

Sandesh Sivakumaran, “Armed Conflict-Related Detention of ParticularlyVulnerable Persons: Challenges and Possibilities”, International Law Studies,Vol. 94, 2018, pp. 39–74.

Persons in connection with the ICRC/precursors of humanitarianaction or law

Books

Patrick Bondallaz et al., Louis Appia à Samuel Lehmann: Mars–avril 1864: Lecorrespondant bernois du Comité de Genève, Société Henry Dunant, Geneva, andSwiss Red Cross, Bern, 2018, 66 pp.

Corinne Chaponnière, Henry Dunant: La croix d’un homme, Labor et Fides,Geneva, 2018, 572 pp.

Roger Durand, Louis Appia 1818–1898, Société Louis Appia and Société HenryDunant, Geneva, 2018, 18 pp.

Roger Durand and Michèle Maury-Moynier, in collaboration with TonyGuggisberg, Regards sur l’Algérie par les Européens au temps d’Henry Dunant:Dessins inédits conservés dans l’Album algérien d’Henry Dunant: Choix de textes

New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee

of the Red Cross

419

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et de bois gravés au temps d’Henry Dunant parus dans L’illustration, journaluniversel, entre 1851 et 1856, Société Henry Dunant, Geneva, 2018, 187 pp.

Karin Hofmann, In jeder Hölle en Stück Himmel: 13 Jahre in Kriegs- undKrisengebieten, Lokwort, Bern, 2018, 363 pp.

Daniel Palmieri et al., Études Romain Rolland: Cahier de Brèves, No. 41, July 2018,64 pp.

Frank Ryding,Memoirs of a Red Cross Doctor: Better to Light a Candle, Pen & SwordBooks, Barnsley, 2017, viii + 238 pp.

Daniel Thürer (address by), The Nuremberg Principles 70 Years Later: ContemporaryChallenges: November 20–21, 2015, International Nuremberg Principles Academy,Nuremberg, 2015, 7 pp.

Protected objects

Articles

Laurie R. Blank, “The Limits of Inviolability: The Parameters for Protection ofUnited Nations Facilities during Armed Conflict”, International Law Studies, Vol.93, 2017, pp. 45–101.

Janine Natalya Clark, “The Destruction of Cultural Heritage in Armed Conflict: The‘Human Element’ and the Jurisprudence of the ICTY”, International Criminal LawReview, Vol. 18, No. 1, 2018, pp. 36–66.

Lara Pratt, “Prosecution for the Destruction of Cultural Property: Significance of theAl Mahdi Trial”, International Criminal Law Review, Vol. 18, No. 6, 2018, pp. 1048–1079.

Matthew Smart, “An Issue of Monumental Proportions: The Necessary Changes toBe Made before International Cultural Heritage Laws Will Protect ImmoveableCultural Property”, Chicago-Kent Law Review, Vol. 91, No. 2, 2016, pp. 759–802.

Noam Zamir, “Distinction Matters: Rethinking the Protection of Civilian Objects inNon-International Armed Conflicts”, Israel Law Review, Vol. 48, No. 1, 2015, pp.111–132.

Public international law

Books

Jean Baechler and Pierre Delvolvé (dir.), Guerre et droit, Hermann, Paris, 2017,252 pp.

Books and articles

420

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Dieter Fleck (ed.), in collaboration with Vladimir Atanasov et al., The Handbookof the Law of Visiting Forces, 2nd ed., Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2018,xlii + 747 pp.

Christine Gray, International Law and the Use of Force, 4th ed., Oxford UniversityPress, Oxford, 2018, xii + 489 pp.

Miles Jackson, Complicity in International Law, Oxford University Press, Oxford,2015, xxii + 238 pp.

Valentin Jeutner, Irresolvable Norm Conflicts in International Law: The Concept of aLegal Dilemma, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2017, xxii + 182 pp.

Elina Lemaire, (dir.), in collaboration with Édouard Bédarrides and RomainRambaud, La Grande Guerre et le droit public, Institut universitaire Varenne,Bayonne, 2017, 208 pp.

André Nollkaemper and Ilias Plakokefalos (eds), The Practice of SharedResponsibility in International Law, assistant ed. Jessica N. M. Schechinger, co-ed.Jann Kleffner, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2017, lxxv + 1152 pp.

Tom Ruys and Olivier Corten (eds), The Use of Force in International Law: A Case-Based Approach, assistant ed. Alexandra Hofer, Oxford University Press, Oxford,2018, xi + 948 pp.

United Nations, TheWork of the International Law Commission, 9th ed., 2 vols, UN,New York, 2017, xiv + 323, xi + 527 pp.

Articles

Ezequiel Heffes, “Some Reflections on the Theory of Sources of International Law:Re-Examining Customary International Law: Book Review Essay”, Israel LawReview, Vol. 51, No. 3, 2018, pp. 485–502.

Themistoklis Tzimas, “Legal Evaluation of the Saudi-Led Intervention in Yemen:Consensual Intervention in Cases of Contested Authority and FragmentedStates”, Zeitschrift für Ausländisches Öffentliches Recht und Völkerrecht/HeidelbergJournal of International Law, Vol. 78, No. 1, 2018, pp. 147–187.

Red cross, red crescent and red crystal emblems

Books

ICRC, Symbols of Help, Hope and Humanity, Geneva, September 2018, 9 pp.

New publications in international humanitarian law and on the International Committee

of the Red Cross

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Weapons

Books

Fred Aja Agwu, Armed Drones and Globalization in the Asymmetric War on Terror:Challenges for the Law of Armed Conflict and Global Politic Economy, Routledge,New York and London, 2018, xv + 342 pp.

Julien Ancelin, La lutte contre la prolifération des armes légères et de petit calibre,Bruylant, Brussels, 2017, xxiii + 770 pp.

Vincent Boulanin and Maaike Verbruggen, SIPRI Compendium on Article 36Reviews, SIPRI Background Paper, December 2017, 27 pp.

Maya Brehm, Defending the Boundary: Constraints and Requirements on the Use ofAutonomous Weapon Systems under International Humanitarian and HumanRights Law, Geneva Academy of International Humanitarian Law and HumanRights, Geneva, 2017, 71 pp.

Stuart Casey-Maslen et al., Drones and Other Unmanned Weapons Systems underInternational Law, Brill Nijhoff, Leiden and Boston, MA, 2018, x + 255 pp.

Bretislav Friedrich et al. (eds), One Hundred Years of Chemical Warfare: Research,Deployment, Consequences, Springer, Cham, 2017, xi + 408 pp.

Wolff Heintschel von Heinegg, Robert Frau and Tassilo Singer (eds),Dehumanization of Warfare: Legal Implications of New Weapon Technologies,Springer, Cham, 2018, x + 233 pp.

Maziar Homayounnejad, Autonomous Weapon Systems, Drone Swarming and theExplosive Remnants of War, Dickson Poon School of Law, King’s CollegeLondon, 2018, 67 pp.

ICRC, La Convention sur les armes à sous-munitions: Un traité pour mettre un termeà des décennies de souffrances civiles, Geneva, September 2017, 12 pp.

ICRC, The Anti-Personnel Mine Ban Convention: Twenty Years of Saving Lives andLimbs and Reducing Civilian Suffering, Geneva, March 2018, 6 pp.

ICRC, The Convention on Cluster Munitions: The First Ten Years, Geneva, August2018, 12 pp.

Articles

Matthew Bolton, “The ‘-Pacific’ Part of ‘Asia-Pacific’: Oceanic Diplomacy in the2017 Treaty for the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons”, Asian Journal of PoliticalScience, Vol. 26, No. 3, 2018, pp. 371–389.

Books and articles

422

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Max Brookman-Byrne, “Drone Use ‘Outside Areas of Active Hostilities’: AnExamination of the Legal Paradigms Governing US Covert Remote Strikes”,Netherlands International Law Review, Vol. 64, No. 1, 2017, pp. 3–41.

Thompson Chengeta, “Are Autonomous Weapon Systems the Subject of Article 36of Additional Protocol I to the Geneva Conventions?”,University of California DavisJournal of International Law and Policy, Vol. 23, No. 1, 2016, pp. 65–99.

Commonwealth Secretariat, “The Arms Trade Treaty and InternationalHumanitarian Law: A Commonwealth Perspective”, Commonwealth Law Bulletin,Vol. 43, No. 3–4, 2017, pp. 533–544.

James Farrant and Christopher M. Ford, “Autonomous Weapons and WeaponReviews: The UK Second International Weapon Review Forum”, InternationalLaw Studies, Vol. 93, 2017, pp. 389–422.

Emilie Fortin, “Prohibition prescrite au sous-paragraphe b de l’article premier de laConvention sur les armes chimiques: Sommes-nous en présence d’un effetgénérateur d’une règle du droit international coutumier?”, Revue Québécoise deDroit International, Vol. 29, No. 2, 2016, pp. 37–74.

Francis Grimal and Jae Sundaram, “Combat Drones: Hives, Swarms, andAutonomous Action?”, Journal of Conflict and Security Law, Vol. 23, No. 1, 2018,pp. 105–135.

Emmanuel Guematcha, “La réglementation internationale du commerceinternational des armes classiques: Le traité du 2 avril 2013 et la protection de lapersonne”, Revue Québécoise de Droit International, Vol. 29, No. 2, 2016, pp. 75–109.

Helin M. Laufer, “War, Weapons and Watchdogs: An Assessment of the Legality ofNew Weapons under International Human Rights Law”, Cambridge InternationalLaw Journal, Vol. 6, No. 1, 2017, pp. 62–74.

Swati Malik, “Autonomous Weapon Systems: The Possibility and Probability ofAccountability”, Wisconsin International Law Journal, Vol. 35, No. 3, 2018, pp.609–642.

David Martin, “The Chemical Weapons Convention: Hollow Idealism or CapableMechanism? The Syrian Intervention as a Test Case”, Loyola of Los AngelesInternational and Comparative Law Review, Vol. 37, No. 1, 2015, pp. 31–66.

Ritu Mathur, “Human Rights as a New Standard of Civilization in WeaponsControl?”, Alternatives: Global, Local, Political, Vol. 42, No. 4, 2017, pp. 227–243.

Shavana Musa, “The Saudi-Led Coalition in Yemen, Arms Exports and HumanRights: Prevention Is Better than Cure”, Journal of Conflict and Security Law,Vol. 22, No. 3, 2017, pp. 433–462.

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of the Red Cross

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Michael Press, “Of Robots and Rules: Autonomous Weapon Systems in the Law ofArmed Conflict”, Georgetown Journal of International Law, Vol. 48, No. 4, 2017, pp.1337–1366.

Daphné Richemond-Barak and Ayal Feinberg, “The Irony of the Iron Dome:Intelligent Defense Systems, Law, and Security”, Harvard National SecurityJournal, Vol. 7, No. 2, 2016, pp. 469–525.

Juliana Santos de Carvalho, “A ‘Male’ Future? An Analysis on the GenderedDiscourses regarding Lethal Autonomous Weapons”, Amsterdam Law Forum,Vol. 10, No. 2, 2018, pp. 41–61.

Vivek Sehrawat, “Legal Status of Drones under LOAC and International Law”, PennState Journal of Law and International Affairs, Vol. 5, No. 1, 2017, pp. 165–206.

Vivek Sehrawat, “Autonomous Weapon System: Law of Armed Conflict (LOAC)and Other Legal Challenges”, Computer Law and Security Review, Vol. 33, No. 1,2017, pp. 38–56.

Robert Sparrow, “Robots and Respect: Assessing the Case against AutonomousWeapon Systems”, Ethics and International Affairs, Vol. 30, No. 1, 2016, pp. 93–116.

Christopher Vail, “The Legality of Nuclear Weapons for Use and Deterrence”,Georgetown Journal of International Law, Vol. 48, No. 3, 2017, pp. 839–872.

Books and articles

424

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