Martinus Nijhoff Publishers and vsp., 2007. — 629 p.
The International Humanitarian Law Series is a series of monographs and edited volumes which aims to promote scholarly analysis and discussion of both the theory and practice of the international legal regulation of armed conflict.
The series explores substantive issues of International Humanitarian Law including,
protection for victims of armed conflict and regulation of the means and methods of warfare
questions of application of the various legal regimes for the conduct of armed conflict
issues relating to the implementation of International Humanitarian Law obligations
national and international approaches to the enforcement of the law and
the interactions between International Humanitarian Law and other related areas of international law such as Human Rights, Refugee Law, Arms Control and Disarmament Law, and International Criminal Law.
Professor Yoram Dinstein; Curriculum Vitae
Professor Yoram Dinstein; List of Academic Publications x
About the Contributors
A Revival of the Just War Theory? Ivan Shearer
Rethinking Collective Security. Thomas Franck
Topographies of Force. Dino Kritsiotis
Claims to Pre-emptive Uses of Force: Some Trends and Projections and Their Implications for World Order. W. Michael Reisman and Andrea Armstrong
The Temporal Dimension of Self-Defense: Anticipation, Preemption, Prevention and Immediacy. Terry D. Gill
Responding to Transnational Terrorism under the Jus ad Bellum: A Normative Framework. Michael N. Schmitt
Is US Adherence to the Rule of Law in International Affairs Feasible? John F. Murphy
The Military Action in Iraq and International Law. Ruth Wedgwood
Ius ad Bellum and Ius in Bello – The Separation between the Legality of the Use of Force and Humanitarian Rules to Be Respected in Warfare: Crucial or Outdated? Marco Sassoli
21st Century Conflict and International Humanitarian Law: Status Quo or Change? Kenneth Watkin
The Law of Weaponry – Is It Adequate? Bill Boothby
Combatants – Substance or Semantics? Charles H.B. Garraway
Unlawful/Enemy Combatants: Interpretations and Consequences. Jelena Pejic
Ghosts in the Machine: Some Legal Issues Concerning US Military Contractors in Iraq. Avril McDonald
Leaders, Courtiers and Command Responsibility in Shakespeare. Theodor Meron
Civilian Detentions in Iraq. Andru E. Wall
Transformative Military Occupation: Applying the Laws of War and Human Rights. Adam Roberts
The Adequacy of International Humanitarian Law Rules on Belligerent Occupation: To What Extent May Security Council Resolution 1483 Be Considered a Model for Adjustment? Rudiger Wolfrum
The Separation Fence in the International Court of Justice and the High Court of Justice: Commonalities, Differences and Specifics. Fania Domb
Benevolent Third States in International Armed Conflicts: The Myth of the Irrelevance of the Law of Neutrality. Wolff Heintschel von Heinegg