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Civility, Barbarism and the Evolution of International Humanitarian Law: Who Do the Laws of War Protect?

Version 3 2025-12-03, 01:21
Version 2 2025-07-22, 02:02
Version 1 2023-05-22, 09:50
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posted on 2025-12-03, 01:21 authored by Matthew Killingsworth, Tim McCormack
<p>Efforts to moderate conflict are as old as conflict itself. Throughout the ages, restraint in warfare has been informed by religious and ethical considerations, chivalry and class, and, increasingly since the mid-19th century, a body of customary and treaty law variously referred to as the laws of war, the law of armed conflict (LOAC) or international humanitarian law (IHL). As they evolved from the mid-19th century, these laws were increasingly underpinned by humanitarianism, then in the mid-20th century, were assumed to be universal. But violations of these restraints are also as old as conflict itself. The history of conflict is replete with examples of exclusions from protections designed to moderate warfare. This edited volume explores the degree to which protections in modern warfare might be informed by notions of 'civility' and 'barbarism', or, to put it another way, asks if only those deemed to be civilised are afforded protections prescribed by the laws of war?</p>

History

Pagination

248

Department/School

Office of the School of Social Sciences, Office of the Faculty of Law

Publisher

Cambridge University Press

Publication status

  • Published

Place of publication

Cambridge

Socio-economic Objectives

230399 International relations not elsewhere classified

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