International Humanitarian Law in Areas of Limited Statehood

Adaptable and Legitimate or Rigid and Unreasonable?

International Humanitarian Law in Areas of Limited Statehood.jpg

Dublin Core

Title

International Humanitarian Law in Areas of Limited Statehood

Adaptable and Legitimate or Rigid and Unreasonable?

Subject

International law

Description

Areas of limited statehood, in which the territorial State lacks effective control, either completely or in part, challenge International Humanitarian Law in various ways. This volume explores if and how the law adapts to these challenges on the basis of mainly two legal issues: detention and investment protection in (non-)international armed conflict. Does a sufficient legal basis exist for the former? Is it International Humanitarian Law that determines what the investor is owed under a ‘full protection and security’ standard? More fundamentally, the contributions strive to shed light on these practical legal issues in a manner that is also historically and theoretically informed. How can international law be effective in areas of limited statehood, in particular as regards non-State actors? Can the law provide incentives for compliance? Is it in need of being developed? If so, who enjoys the legitimacy to do so?

Creator

Anton O. Petrov (editor)
Linus Mührel (editor)
Björnstjern Baade (editor)

Source

https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/37406

Contributor

Andri Yanti

Rights

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/legalcode

Format

Pdf

Language

English

Type

Textbooks

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