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Edited Legal Collections Data |
Book Title: International Humanitarian Law
Editor(s): Sassòli, Marco
Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing
Section Title: Extended contents
Number of pages: 12
Extract:
EXTENDED CONTENTS
List of abbreviations xix
Acknowledgments xxv
Reader's guide xxvii
Table of instruments xxix
1. INTRODUCTION 1.01
2. HISTORY 2.01
3. A GENERAL OVERVIEW OF IHL BASED UPON ITS
MAJOR DELIMITATIONS 3.01
3.1 IHL APPLIES ONLY TO ARMED CONFLICTS 3.02
3.2 THE THRESHOLD OF APPLICATION IN IACS VERSUS NIACS 3.04
3.3 THE INDEPENDENCE OF IHL FROM JUS AD BELLUM 3.10
3.4 THE FUNDAMENTAL DIFFERENCE BETWEEN CIVILIANS AND COMBATANTS AND
THE RESULTING IHL PROTECTION REGIMES 3.14
3.4.1 The starting point: the difference between civilians and combatants in IACs 3.14
3.4.2 The legal regime protecting civilians and fighters in NIACs 3.19
3.4.3 Factors limiting the relevance of the principle of distinction between
combatants and civilians 3.23
3.5 THE DISTINCTION BETWEEN THE PROTECTION OF PERSONS IN THE POWER OF A
PARTY AND THE PROTECTION OF PERSONS DURING THE CONDUCT OF HOSTILITIES 3.28
3.5.1 The protection of persons who are in the power of a party 3.34
3.5.2 The rules on the conduct of hostilities 3.37
4. THE SOURCES OF IHL 4.01
4.1 TREATIES 4.03
4.1.1 The Hague Conventions of 1907 4.08
4.1.2 The Geneva Conventions of 1949 4.11
4.1.3 The Additional Protocols 4.15
4.1.4 Weapons treaties 4.17
4.1.5 Treaties protecting cultural heritage 4.19
4.1. ...
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URL: http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/ELECD/2019/590.html