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Url canonique : www.lavoisier.fr/livre/sciences-humaines-et-sociales/international-humanitarian-law-and-justice/descriptif_4007968
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International Humanitarian Law and Justice Historical and Sociological Perspectives

Langue : Anglais

Coordonnateurs : Deland Mats, Klamberg Mark, Wrange Pål

Couverture de l’ouvrage International Humanitarian Law and Justice

In the last decade, there has been a turn to history in international humanitarian law and its accompanying fields. To examine this historization and to expand the current scope of scholarship, this book brings together scholars from various fields, including law, history, sociology, and international relations. Human rights law, international criminal law, and the law on the use of force are all explored across the text?s four main themes: historiographies of selected fields of international law; evolution of specific international humanitarian law rules in the context of legal gaps and fault lines; emotions as a factor in international law; and how actors can influence history. This work will enhance and broaden readers? knowledge of the field and serve as an excellent starting point for further research.

1: Introduction; 2: PART ONE; 3: Chapter 1 - Introduction; 4: Chapter 2 - Historicising International Criminal Trials within the Modernist Project; 5: Chapter 3 - Engaging History in the Legal Protection of Cultural Heritage in War and Peace; 6: Chapter 4 - From Spies to International Criminals: The Influence of the Austro-Hungarian Counter Espionage Service on the International Criminal Police Commission; 7: Chapter 5 - Authority, Legitimacy and Military Violence: De Facto Combatant Privilege of Non-State Armed Groups through Amnesty; 8: PART TWO; 9: Chapter 1 - Introduction: Evolution of Rules and Concepts in International Humanitarian Law: Navigating through Legal Gaps and Fault-lines; 10: Chapter 2 - A hidden fault-line: How international actors engage with IHL’s principle of distinction; 11: Chapter 3 - Restraint in bello: Some thoughts on reciprocity and humanity; 12: Chapter 4 - Judging the past – international humanitarian law and the Luftwaffe aerial operations during the invasion of Poland in 1939; 13: PART THREE; 14: Chapter 1 - Introduction: Emotions and the law; 15: Chapter 2 - To feel or not to feel? Emotions and international humanitarian law To feel or not to feel? Emotions and international humanitarian law; 16: Chapter 3 - To Kill or Not to Kill as a Social Question; 17: Chapter 4 - War of Wor(l)ds – Clashing Narratives and Interpretations of I(H)L in the Intractable Israeli-Palestinian Conflict; 18: PART FOUR; 19: Introduction: The lawyer as an actor in history and society; 20: Chapter 2 - Lemkin on vandalism and the protection of cultural works and historical monuments during armed conflict; 21: Chapter 3 - Forgotten, but nevertheless relevant! Gustave Moynier’s attempts to punish violations of the laws of war 1870-1916; 22: Chapter 4 - The feminist origins of the Swedish Red Cross; 23: Index

Postgraduate

Mats Deland is Associate Professor in history and temporary lecturer at Mittuniversitet, Sundsvall, Sweden. His publications include Purgatorium (vol. 1, 2010, vol. 2, 2017) and he has expertise in Holocaust studies and Genocide studies, Urban history, Right-Wing Extremism, and the History of International Law.

Dr. Mark Klamberg(Jur. Dr. Stockholm University, LL.M. Raoul Wallenberg Institute and Jur. Kand. Lund University) is Associate Professor in international law at Stockholm University. He is the author of several publications on international criminal law, surveillance, privacy, and other fields of international law, including "Evidence in International Criminal Trials: Confronting Legal Gaps and the Reconstruction of Disputed Events" (Martinus Nijhoff Publishers, 2013) and "Power and Law in the International Society – International Relations as the Sociology of International Law" (Routledge, 2015). He is the chief editor of the "Commentary on the Law of the ICC" (CLICC).

Pål Wrange (PhD, LL.M) is Professor in public international law at Stockholm University and the Director of the Stockholm Center for International Law and Justice. He is a former principal legal advisor at the Swedish Ministry for Foreign Affairs. He has published widely on international law, international relations and theory and he has worked and consulted for the European Union, governments, and NGOs. He is currently working on a book on non-state actors, right authority, and the right to use military violence.