The Qualification Framework of International Humanitarian Law: Too Rigid to Accommodate Contemporary Conflicts?

E. Holland
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引用次数: 10

Abstract

This Note examines the traditional binary qualification framework in the context of contemporary conflicts marked by everchanging degrees of cross-border activity, third-state involvement, and non-state actor participation. First, this Note lays out the material scope of international and non-international armed conflicts. Next, it examines three cases in which the International Court of Justice (ICJ), the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), and the U.S. Supreme Court addressed questions of qualification. The Note then questions whether the binary framework is incongruous with contemporary conflicts due to the difficulty in qualifying many situations. The Note concludes by suggesting that rather than develop new law to address current challenges, a broader and more flexible application of protections found in existing law, less restricted by the traditional dichotomy, may provide a constructive and practical basis from which to proceed when determining application of international or non-international armed conflict rules to specific contexts.
国际人道法的资格框架:过于僵化,无法适应当代冲突?
本文在以跨境活动、第三国参与和非国家行为体参与程度不断变化为特征的当代冲突背景下,考察了传统的二元资格框架。首先,本说明列出了国际性和非国际性武装冲突的实质范围。接下来,它审查了国际法院(ICJ)、前南斯拉夫问题国际刑事法庭(前南问题国际法庭)和美国最高法院处理资格问题的三个案件。《说明》随后质疑二元框架是否与当代冲突不协调,因为很难对许多情况进行定性。《说明》最后建议,与其制定新的法律来应对当前的挑战,不如更广泛、更灵活地适用现有法律中的保护措施,较少受传统二分法的限制,从而为确定国际或非国际武装冲突规则对具体情况的适用提供建设性和实际的基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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