18 results with keyword: 'chapter law armed conflict international humanitarian law'
Application of International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights Law In contrast to International Humanitarian Law which only applies in situations of armed conflict, Human Rights
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If non-State forces have sufficient control of territory to satisfy the requirements of Protocol II, non-international conflicts are governed by the Protocol in addition to
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Prisoners of war , in the sense of the present Convention, are persons belonging to one of the following categories, who have fallen into the power of the enemy: (1) Members of
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It focuses on the intersecting legal regimes governing armed conflict of international humanitarian law (IHL), international human rights law (IHRL), international criminal
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With respect to the application of the Covenant and the international law of armed conflict (also referred to as international humanitarian law or “IHL”), the United
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Vincent Chetail, ‘Armed Conflict and Forced Migration: A Systemic Approach to International Humanitarian Law, Refugee Law and Human Rights Law’ in Andrew Clapham and Paola Gaeta
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International Journal in Management and Social Science (Impact Factor- 6.178) PROTECTION OF WOMEN IN ARMED CONFLICT AND INTERNATIONAL HUMANITARIAN LAW..
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personnel, standards of respect for Human Rights and Law of War (also known as Law of Armed Conflict, or LOAC, and International Humanitarian Law, or IHL) are codified
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Diplomatic Conference for the Reaffirmation and Development of International Humanitarian Law Applicable in Armed Conflict, 84, 307n.. Diplomatic
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The Court required the intervention to address two issues: first, the relationship between the law of armed conflict (LOAC), also known as international humanitarian law(IHL),
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If the conflict is a non-international armed conflict, the rules of international humanitarian law con- tained in Common Article 3 of the Geneva Conventions and
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The principle of humanity underlying the international community’s efforts to regulate the armed conflict that actually occurred in the territory of a country and
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An event-specific displacement approach holds that hu- manitarian law displaces human rights law during times of armed conflict, but only in the context of
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targeting policy degrades International humanitarian law and “undermines the legal framework meant to protect human rights in armed conflict.” 88 Among the arguments made
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Before being recognised as an armed conflict the situation was one of internal unrest or disturbance: No International Humanitarian Law regime applied and IHRL
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The key instruments of International Humanitarian Law (IHL), the 1949 Geneva Conventions and the Additional Protocols of 1977, divide armed conflict into two
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The application of rules ad hoc for the protection of fundamental rights, in cases of armed conflict (international humanitarian law), implies the competition of these
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